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 New capital rules delayed to give banks more time to reform
 
CreateTime:2012-06-19     Source:shanghaidaily Editor:liuhongli
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CHINA has delayed the start date for implementing new capital-adequacy rules under the Basel III framework, but the nation's banks are under orders to use the reprieve to push ahead with reforms in the sector.

The government said earlier this month that the new rules will come into effect next January 1. The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision developed Basel III to address financial regulation deficiencies arising from the 2008-09 global financial crisis. The new rules essentially require banks to hold more capital as risk cushion against bad times.

China circulated draft rules for implementation last August. At that time, the start-up date was set at the start of 2012. The delay has been blamed on a slowdown in the nation's economy and concern about how the European debt crisis will play out in international financial circles.

In the first quarter, China's economy grew 8.1 percent to notch its slowest performance in two years. The government believes that ample credit supply is essential for growth to pick up.

Capital targets

"The rules aim to set reasonable schedules for banks to meet capital targets in a way that helps maintain appropriate credit growth," the State Council, China's Cabinet, said in a statement on June 6.

The new draft rules require large banks to maintain capital adequacy ratios at 11.5 percent, while the remainder of lenders must keep 10.5 percent as the minimum. The banks must meet the targets before 2019, three years later than originally expected.

In the first quarter, the weighted average capital adequacy of Chinese banks was 12.7 percent, according to the China Banking Regulatory Commission. Shang Fulin, the CBRC chairman, told the People's Daily newspaper last week the ratio will fall about 1 percentage point after the implementation of revised rules. By that time a few banks may fall below the target, while the majority will be safe.

China is trying to reform its banking sector to make it conform more closely with international standards on risk management, loan losses and prudent lending. In other words, it wants to make the financial industry to make more efficient use of money.

"The fundamental purpose is to guide commercial banks to establish long-term mechanisms of prudent operation, to strengthen the mechanism that restrains capital expansion and to shift the scale and speed-driven mode of development," Shang said.

Banks' easy profits

Premier Wen Jiabao has criticized the "easy profits" of the big lenders, saying they are taking advantage of their dominant position. The banks have long relied on interest income from feeding loans to giant state-owned companies. At the same time, some have provided financial services to ineligible property development projects to keep their profits.

The National Audit Office said earlier this month in a statement that subsidiaries of the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, China Citic Bank and China Merchants Bank violated banking rules between 2004 and 2010 by issuing 18.9 billion yuan (US$3 billion) of loans to property developers and local government financing vehicles.

"One of the critical considerations when developing the draft was to strengthen the services to support the real economy," Shang said. "At the moment, lenders still favor large enterprises over small and medium-size enterprises that are cash strapped."

The draft rules lower the risk buffer for lending to small business and individuals so that costs for lenders will be lower.

JP Morgan wrote in a report published after the announcement of the revised rules that the draft sweetens the incentive for banks to lend to the two groups of borrowers.

Eying other businesses

In addition, banks are being encouraged to develop businesses with lower capital deployment, such as trade financing, investment banking, wealth management and retail banking, analysts said.

CHINA has delayed the start date for implementing new capital-adequacy rules under the Basel III framework, but the nation's banks are under orders to use the reprieve to push ahead with reforms in the sector.

The government said earlier this month that the new rules will come into effect next January 1. The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision developed Basel III to address financial regulation deficiencies arising from the 2008-09 global financial crisis. The new rules essentially require banks to hold more capital as risk cushion against bad times.

China circulated draft rules for implementation last August. At that time, the start-up date was set at the start of 2012. The delay has been blamed on a slowdown in the nation's economy and concern about how the European debt crisis will play out in international financial circles.

In the first quarter, China's economy grew 8.1 percent to notch its slowest performance in two years. The government believes that ample credit supply is essential for growth to pick up.

Capital targets

"The rules aim to set reasonable schedules for banks to meet capital targets in a way that helps maintain appropriate credit growth," the State Council, China's Cabinet, said in a statement on June 6.

The new draft rules require large banks to maintain capital adequacy ratios at 11.5 percent, while the remainder of lenders must keep 10.5 percent as the minimum. The banks must meet the targets before 2019, three years later than originally expected.

In the first quarter, the weighted average capital adequacy of Chinese banks was 12.7 percent, according to the China Banking Regulatory Commission. Shang Fulin, the CBRC chairman, told the People's Daily newspaper last week the ratio will fall about 1 percentage point after the implementation of revised rules. By that time a few banks may fall below the target, while the majority will be safe.

China is trying to reform its banking sector to make it conform more closely with international standards on risk management, loan losses and prudent lending. In other words, it wants to make the financial industry to make more efficient use of money.

"The fundamental purpose is to guide commercial banks to establish long-term mechanisms of prudent operation, to strengthen the mechanism that restrains capital expansion and to shift the scale and speed-driven mode of development," Shang said.

Banks' easy profits

Premier Wen Jiabao has criticized the "easy profits" of the big lenders, saying they are taking advantage of their dominant position. The banks have long relied on interest income from feeding loans to giant state-owned companies. At the same time, some have provided financial services to ineligible property development projects to keep their profits.

The National Audit Office said earlier this month in a statement that subsidiaries of the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, China Citic Bank and China Merchants Bank violated banking rules between 2004 and 2010 by issuing 18.9 billion yuan (US$3 billion) of loans to property developers and local government financing vehicles.

"One of the critical considerations when developing the draft was to strengthen the services to support the real economy," Shang said. "At the moment, lenders still favor large enterprises over small and medium-size enterprises that are cash strapped."

The draft rules lower the risk buffer for lending to small business and individuals so that costs for lenders will be lower.

JP Morgan wrote in a report published after the announcement of the revised rules that the draft sweetens the incentive for banks to lend to the two groups of borrowers.

Eying other businesses

In addition, banks are being encouraged to develop businesses with lower capital deployment, such as trade financing, investment banking, wealth management and retail banking, analysts said.

 


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