Asia

China’s ICBC to support stabilisation of property market

SHANGHAI: The Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC) said on Thursday (Mar 28) it will support moves underway in the world’s second-largest economy to stabilise its property market.

The comments were made by Wang Jingwu, a vice president at the world’s largest lender, at a press conference held a day after its annual results were published. Wang did not specify what kind of support ICBC would provide.

ICBC and Bank of Communications Co Ltd, which kicked off earnings reporting of China’s five major state banks, both reported barely any profit growth in 2023 amid slowing economic growth.

Agricultural Bank of China Ltd (AgBank), which reported its earnings on Thursday, posted a slightly sunnier 3.9 per cent increase in net profit in 2023.

Volatility in China’s property market, which started with policies aimed at reining in developer debt, has seen defaults and failures at several property firms, hurting the sector’s financiers and leaving investors wondering whether state-owned property firms will get more support from banks versus privately owned ones.

Chinese regulators are pushing banks to speed up approvals of new loans to cash-starved private developers, Reuters reported earlier this week, amid reluctance by the lenders to deepen their exposure to the ailing sector.

ICBC “will treat property firms equally, regardless of their ownership”, said Wang.

The property sector and its woes were also a focus for the Bank of Communications Co Ltd (BoCom), which posted a higher proportion of non-performing loans from property firms on Wednesday and warned of risks to asset quality.

“The pressure on asset quality control is significant,” said Yin Jiuyong, BoCom’s vice president, adding that the bank “should step up risk control” of its property-sector related business.

BoCom’s non-performing loan ratio for real estate lending was 4.49 per cent at the end of last year, rising from 2.8 per cent at the end of 2022.

Meanwhile AgBank said that its bad loans mainly sprung from the property sector and local government debt.

NARROWING PROFITABILITY

This year, the weakness of the property sector is expected to add pressure on banks’ asset quality and profitability.

“We believe weakness in the property sector and LGFV (local government financing vehicles) exposures, together with subdued consumer demand, are likely to continue to weigh on Chinese banks’ performance in 2024,” said Elaine Xu, Director of Asia-Pacific Financial Institution, Fitch Ratings.

The net interest margin (NIM) of ICBC, BoCom and AgBank – a gauge of profitability – further narrowed last year and is expected to continue to face pressure in 2024, said banks and analysts.

For smaller lenders which rely more on property loans, 2024 looks more bleak, said Xu.

“Small regional banks in economically weaker regions, which are experiencing deeper property sector stress, could face most negative impact on their credit profiles in 2024,” she added.

Source: CNA

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