China's riskier banks are investing more customer funds in financing that is kept off their loan books, making it harder for rating companies to gauge their asset quality.
China’s riskier
banks are investing more customer funds in financing that is kept off
their loan books, making it harder for rating companies to gauge their
asset quality.
There has been a surge in a balance-sheet item
known as receivables, which often includes shadow funding such as trusts
and wealth products, said Moody’s Investors Service. Fitch Ratings said
it is hard to analyze this escalation in activity. Listed banks
excluding the Big Four saw short-term investments and other assets --
which include receivables -- jump 25 percent in the first half, compared
with total asset growth of 12 percent, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
Slower
growth in the world’s second-largest economy coupled with "still
significant" credit expansion prompted Standard & Poor’s to cut its
view of the banking industry’s economic risk to negative from stable
this week. Shadow-finance assets, estimated at 41 trillion yuan ($6.4
trillion) by Moody’s at the end of 2014, have become more attractive as
five interest-rate cuts by the central bank since November curbed profits from lending.
"Our
concern with some of these investment positions is banks are using them
as a way to bypass lending restrictions," said Grace Wu, a senior
director at Fitch in Hong Kong. "Unlike bank loans, they don’t get
reported into loan provisions, so it’s more difficult for us to
ascertain the asset quality."
The
opacity of Chinese banks’ credit exposure helps explain why they are
priced as if investors are expecting a nonperforming loan ratio of 10 to
12 percent next year, which would mark a "sizeable credit crisis" in
other countries, according to Wei Hou, a banking analyst at Sanford C.
Bernstein & Co. The reported ratio is 1.5 percent, according to the
China Banking Regulatory Commission.
The nation’s shadow-banking
industry emerged as a way for creditors to circumvent lending
restrictions and for savers to attain yields higher than the legally
capped deposit rate. It includes trusts, asset-management plans and
wealth-management products, which package loans into products for
buyers.
Shanghai Pudong Development Bank Co.’s receivables made up
about a quarter of assets as of June 30, according to its semi-annual
financial statement. Out of 1.1 trillion yuan of receivables, 82 percent
were trusts and asset-management plans that purchase trust loans, while
11 percent were other lenders’ wealth management products.
The
receivables climbed in the first half because the bank invested more
in other lenders’ guaranteed WMPs as well as in asset-management
products derived from bills issued by large banks, Shanghai Pudong said
in an e-mail. It added that its credit and liquidity risks are both
manageable.
Less Liquid
Adding loan investments and
receivables to banks’ loan-to-deposit ratios pushes the figure close to
or even over 100 percent for some commercial lenders, such as Shanghai
Pudong and China Citic Bank Corp. Ltd., according to Moody’s analysis.
"Though they’re called investments, they’re less liquid than most investments,"
Christine Kuo, a senior vice president at Moody’s, said at a briefing in
Taipei. "So the funding you’re relying on isn’t steady deposits but
more sensitive wholesale money. When the market is tighter, the banks’
liquidity management will be more difficult."
Chinese banks are already facing slowing deposit growth amid competition from higher-yielding investments.
Deposits climbed an average 12 percent each month in 2015 from a year
ago, compared with 15 percent in the five previous years. While
interbank rates have become steadier in the past year amid monetary
easing, they are still more volatile than in other markets. The
three-month Shanghai Interbank Offered Rate moved in a range of 2.3
percentage points over the past year, compared with 0.12 percentage
point for the London interbank offered rate of the same tenor.
Banks
are also binging on the riskiest class of debt, with lenders other than
the biggest five issuing 85 billion yuan of Tier 2 securities in the
third quarter after raising 91.7 billion yuan in the three months to
June 30. That’s the highest two quarters on record, according to data
compiled by Bloomberg. The yield premium investors demand to own Bank of
Beijing Co.’s 4.9 percent 2026 bonds over similar-maturity government
debt has widened four basis points since June 30 to 168.2 basis points.
Yield Driven
Investments
in loans and receivables are more popular with mid-tier banks, which
face higher funding costs and are more driven by yields, said Wu at
Fitch. Chinese lenders’ net interest margin narrowed to 2.51 percent in
the second quarter from 2.73 percent three years ago, CBRC data show.
The regulator didn’t respond to a fax seeking comment.
Investors
are paying more to hedge their exposure to Chinese credit as growth
slows and a plunge in equities since June heightens financial risks. The
nation’s credit-default swaps, which pay buyers in the case of a
sovereign payment failure, have risen 28 basis points this quarter to a
two-year high of 122 on Wednesday. The yuan has declined 2.7 percent
since the day before a shock devaluation on Aug. 11.
Manufacturing Contracts
The
preliminary Purchasing Managers’ Index from Caixin Media and Markit
Economics was at 47.0 for September, missing the median estimate of 47.5
in a Bloomberg survey and below the final reading of 47.3 in the
previous month. Readings have remained below 50 since March, indicating
contraction.
Shadow financing thrived in China partly to help
banks bypass a two-decade-old 75 percent cap on their loan-to-deposit
ratios. Now with the rule set to be scrapped on Oct. 1, lenders may be more likely to record credit on their loan books, said Wei at Sanford C. Bernstein.
"If
they can lend more with the same amount of deposits, they may not need
to hide their loan exposure in other parts of their balance sheet," he
said. "The debt receivables is another platform for banks to continue to
channel credit into the shadow banking sector. Sooner or later I think
regulators will catch up and close the loophole as well."
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