Advertisement

China's rate-cut likely to hurt banks, curb new loans to small borrowers

By Engen Tham

SHANGHAI (Reuters) - China's latest interest rate cut is set to dent the profitability of domestic lenders, especially mid-sized banks, which are already suffering from higher bad loans and a slowdown in profit growth.

The central bank unexpectedly cut rates late on Friday, stepping up efforts to support small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) which are struggling to repay loans and access credit, as the economy slides to its slowest growth in nearly a quarter of a century.

It slashed the one-year benchmark lending rate by 40 basis points to 5.6 percent while lowering the one-year benchmark deposit rate by 25 basis points to 2.75 percent.

The narrowing of interest rate margins will eat into lenders' profitability, with Cinda Securities' chief strategist, Jiahe Chen, predicting it will cut profits by up to 5 percent.

Interest margins generated from lending have already been shrinking for second-tier lenders, which have been squeezed by competition from online financiers and a rise in funding costs stemming from an industry tussle for deposits.

Fitch Ratings downgraded its credit rating of China Guangfa Bank, a medium-sized lender, two days before the rate-cut announcement, and said the level of off-balance-sheet lending among second-tier banks was a concern.

The squeeze on profits will make it tougher for lenders to raise capital to meet new international rules designed to protect depositors from banking collapses. Retained profits are one way in which banks can build up regulatory capital.

"In the past when Chinese banks disburse loans, they mainly relied on profits from their own capital to replenish their capital," Jiang Jianqing, chairman of China's biggest commercial bank, the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China Co Ltd, told a conference in Beijing on Saturday.

'WE WON'T START LENDING NOW'

The People's Bank of China said in announcing the rate cut that it wanted to help smaller firms gain access to credit.

While the measures may ease the financing costs of these firms' existing loans, it is unlikely to encourage banks to write new loans to lower-rung borrowers, bankers said.

Smaller companies are considered high risk and banks do not want to increase their exposure to weaker borrowers, they said.

"At the moment banks have a lot of problems with them, they have higher rates of default ... we're suspicious of their creditworthiness, so we're very careful about lending to them," said a senior loan officer at a top-10 bank.

He declined to be identified because he was not authorised to speak to the media.

Among China's five largest banks, lending will continue to favour China's state-controlled companies, state-invested enterprises and those involved with large projects overseen by the government, bankers added.

In the third-quarter, China's banks reported rising bad loans and slowing profit growth, amid fears that a credit crunch could spread further.

"We've been moving away from SME lending over the last two years in my department. We won't start lending now,” said another senior loan officer at one of the country's top five banks.

(Additional reporting by Koh Guiqing in Beijing, Lawrence White and Lisa Jucca in Hong Kong; Editing by Kazunori Takada and Mark Bendeich)