Latest News:  

English>>Business

Slower growth of local govts poses 'threat to banks'

By Wei Tian (China Daily)

08:37, June 27, 2013

Slowing growth in local government incomes could exacerbate liquidity shortages among Chinese banks, experts said.

"Chinese banks are like a cashbox for local governments; therefore, they are not exempt from the difficulties of local governments' financial situation," said Zhao Quanhou, head of financial research at the Institute of Fiscal Sciences at the Ministry of Finance.

According to the ministry, government revenues grew 6.6 percent in the first five months, 6.1 percentage points slower than a year earlier. The growth target for 2013 is 8.5 percent.

The deceleration was attributed to the slowing economy, weakening industrial activity and structural tax cuts, the ministry said in an online statement.

Last week, the People's Bank of China kept the domestic money market short of funds during a period of seasonal tightness. As a result, the average interbank offered rate among 18 Chinese commercial banks rose to a record high of 13.4 percent on Thursday.

Although Zhao said there was no direct link between the two situations, as last week's liquidity shortage was mostly a seasonal phenomenon, "the fact that local governments' borrowings have taken a considerable share in the banks' loan balances poses a threat in case of similar conditions in the future."

Against the backdrop of central bank statistics showing rapid first-half credit growth, Moody's Investors Service said it is prudent for China to curb its credit growth to more sustainable levels to avert excessive leverage.

Bank loans account for more than 80 percent of local governments' financing, while local governments are responsible for 20 percent of Chinese banks' loan balances, according to Zhao.

Local governments account for an even larger share of financing via wealth management products issued by banks, at a level between 30 and 40 percent, Zhao said.

"Local governments have taken up massive credit resources, and slowing revenue growth will threaten their loan repayment capacity," Zhao said.

Zhao said most of the loans have been invested in public projects that generate little revenue, so repayments depend mostly on local governments' fiscal revenue.

"In the long term, if local governments continue such massive investment, it will lead to a rise in non-performing loans at commercial banks."

Tobias Moerschen, vice-president and senior research analyst with Moody's, said exposure to local government financing vehicles that are used by many of China's local governments to raise funding represents a key risk for Chinese banks.

"Only 53 percent of 388 surveyed companies now have sufficient cash resources to cover estimated debt and interest payments in 2013 without resorting to refinancing," Moerschen wrote in a report.

Banks' non-performing loans remain low at 0.5 percent or less of their total loans to local government financing vehicles, but Moerschen said this was a result of the local governments' support, not because of any intrinsic financial strength.

The extent of losses to the banks would depend on the degree to which local governments and regulators support the financing vehicles, but Moody's noted that several developments may challenge their ability to provide assistance in the future.

"For example, slower revenue growth at some local governments will constrain their capacity to provide support, while regulators are also limiting local governments' ability to inject land reserves into their financing vehicles."

We Recommend:

'All in Tuning All in Caravanning' Show

HK's new cruise terminal receives luxury liner

Huawei unveils thinnest smartphone in Singapore

Airbus A350 lands safely from test flight in S. France

Special coverage: China-EU solar row

Highlights of ATC Show 2013

Top 10 luxury villas of China in 2013

Turn rabbit to 'gold' - A young entrepreneur's goal

Hilton to open 120 new hotels in China

Email|Print|Comments(Editor:WangLili、Gao Yinan)

Leave your comment0 comments

  1. Name

  

Selections for you


  1. Special forces in joint training


  2. J-15 fighter fastened on aircraft carrier

  3. Best photos of week (June 17 - June 23)

  4. A university graduate's shepherd career

  5. Father Chen and his 2,000 children

  6. Photos: Hazy life in Beijing

  7. Food Taipei 2013 exhibition kicks off

  8. Graduates hold fashion show in Hong Kong

  9. Chinese shares extend losses

  10. Highlights of luxury China 2013

Most Popular

Opinions

  1. China 'most promising' in FDI
  2. Shanghai kids more likely to have asthma
  3. Money not the answer to all problems
  4. Syria conference unlikely to be in July
  5. Snowden not on board flight to Cuba
  6. Cause of human rights should ground in reality
  7. Snowden case should not affect Sino-U.S. ties
  8. Chinese consumer spending weakens
  9. Think tank has huge potential for development
  10. Why top scorers in Gaokao choose to go abroad

What’s happening in China

A university graduate's shepherd career

  1. Shanghai reports 1 H7N9 death
  2. 5 dead, 23 injured in NW China road accident
  3. Rehab centers face obstacles in China
  4. Sniffer dogs get new life with families
  5. Chemical plant blaze blamed on illegal work