Friday, January 11, 2013

China Loan Share at Record Low Shows Financing Risks

China’s bank loans as a share of funding in the economy may have fallen to a record low, highlighting the growth of alternative financing channels that have prompted warnings of rising credit risks.


New yuan loans probably dropped 14 percent last month from a year earlier, according to the median projection in a Bloomberg News survey of 37 analysts ahead of data due by Jan. 15.

That would give bank lending a 55 percent share of aggregate financing for 2012, based on UBS AG estimates, the least in figures dating to 2002.

The decline underscores the waning ability of official loan data to capture the scale of debt in the world’s second-largest economy as borrowers and investors turn to less-regulated, higher-return shadow-banking products.

The People’s Bank of China is putting greater emphasis on aggregate financing and the International Monetary Fund says the growth of nonbank credit poses “new challenges to financial stability.”

“China’s economic performance in 2013 will be significantly affected by how seriously Chinese regulators are going to treat non-bank financing,” said Shi Lei, a Beijing- based analyst with broker Founder Securities Co., who has provided research advice to China’s securities regulator.

While a hands-off approach will help the economy, a crackdown “would be really bad for growth.”

The PBOC lending figures are among December data in the coming days that will show whether an economic rebound that began in September picked up or slowed last month after a seven- quarter growth slowdown.

Trade figures due tomorrow may show exports rose at a faster pace and a Jan. 11 report may indicate inflation accelerated.

Growth Pickup

The government will release fourth-quarter gross domestic product as well as December industrial production, retail sales and fixed-asset investment on Jan. 18.

Economic growth probably accelerated to 7.8 percent in the quarter from a year earlier, up from a three-year low in the previous period, according to a Bloomberg News survey last month. China’s benchmark stock gauge, the Shanghai Composite Index, was little changed today.

It has gained 16 percent since an almost four-year low on Dec. 3 on signs the economy is picking up. The PBOC in April 2011 started providing data on aggregate financing, which includes bank and non-bank lending, on a trial basis as part of the release on loan and money-supply statistics.

In September 2012, the central bank began issuing a separate monthly press release on the broader indicator, emphasizing it by waiting at least five hours before putting out the monetary figures.

The PBOC also gave historical data for the previous decade, illustrating how bank loans have declined from their 2002 share of 91.9 percent.

Closer Correlation

Sheng Songcheng, head of the PBOC’s statistics department, said in 2011 that aggregate financing is more closely correlated with GDP and inflation than new yuan loans.

The slice of funding may shrink further amid China’s “rapid development of financial innovation,” the PBOC said in September.

Aggregate financing, also called total social financing, includes banks’ yuan loans and six other categories: foreign- currency loans, entrusted loans, trust loans, bankers’ acceptance bills, corporate bonds and non-financial stock sales.

“As trust loans, bonds and other non-bank financing grow, the central bank has a full reason to promote the new indicator,” said Joy Yang, chief Greater China economist at Mirae Asset Securities (HK) Ltd. in Hong Kong, who previously worked at the IMF.

Deposit Pools

Trusts typically offer better rates of return than banks, pooling deposits from businesses and households to invest in real estate, stocks, bonds, commodities, or other assets.

Lending by so-called trust companies surged five times to 1.04 trillion yuan ($167 billion) in the first 11 months of 2012 compared with the whole of 2011.

A “large part” of the sector’s lending is to higher-risk entities including local- government investment vehicles and property developers, and investors may underestimate risks, the IMF said in its Global Financial Stability Report in October.

Aggregate financing was probably 15 trillion yuan last year, according to UBS. The median estimate of seven analysts surveyed by Bloomberg was for 1.2 trillion yuan in December, compared with 1.27 trillion yuan a year earlier.

The PBOC may also say that China’s foreign-exchange reserves, the world’s largest, rose to a record $3.32 trillion at the end of December from $3.29 trillion three months earlier, based on the median estimate of seven economists. M2 money supply probably rose 14 percent in December from a year earlier, up from a 13.9 percent gain in November.

Australia Retail

Elsewhere in the Asia-Pacific region today, an Australian government report showed November retail sales unexpectedly fell 0.1 percent from October, the first drop in four months.

The Bank of Thailand will keep the benchmark interest rate unchanged at a policy meeting today, all 22 economists surveyed by Bloomberg forecast.

In Europe’s day ahead, separate reports may show the U.K. trade deficit narrowed in November from a month earlier and German industrial production probably gained for the first time since July, according to the economist surveys.

In North America, Canada may say housing starts were little changed in December, while the U.S.’s Mortgage Bankers Association will report loan applications for the week ended Jan. 4, after the index fell for the previous three periods.

Tomorrow’s China customs administration report may show exports rose 5 percent last month from a year earlier, up from 2.9 percent in November, while imports gained 3.5 percent after being unchanged the prior month, based on analyst estimates.

Overseas shipments gained 13.4 percent in December 2011. “The major drag in the near term lies in the external sector,” Zhu Haibin, chief China economist at JPMorgan Chase & Co. in Hong Kong, wrote in a Jan. 7 note.

Consumer prices may have increased 2.3 percent in December, the fastest rate since May, in statistics bureau data due Jan. 11. McDonald’s Corp., the world’s largest restaurant chain, raised some menu prices in China because of higher labor and input costs, the company said Jan. 7.

bloomberg.com

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