When the four State-owned banks retreated from rural areas in an attempt to
improve their business performance, shutting down branches in small towns and
remote counties, local financial markets slumped as the big cities amassed more
financial resources.
One of the important tasks in the financial
restructure of the State-owned banks was to forge more prudent policies about
granting loans and to conduct stricter surveillance on existing
loans.
Therefore, loans granted by the four State-owned banks witnessed a
slight decrease in 2004 and 2005, while other commercial banks snatched bigger
market shares in 2005.
This situation changed when BOC, CCB and the ICBC
finished their financial restructuring and went public, one after the
other.
In the first three months of the year, the country's banks loaned
1.26 trillion yuan (US$155 billion) more than half the expected bank loans for
the year, 2.5 trillion yuan (US$309 billion). A large proportion of the loans
were made by the four State-owned banks.
This drastic turnaround in
credit policy by the State-owned banks originates primarily from the huge
difference between their deposits and loans, which represents massive debt for
the banks unless it's used appropriately to make profit.
But more
importantly, this U-turn in their business strategies stems from the changing
functions of the State-owned banks.
As public companies, the State-owned
banks have to earn more profit for shareholders while maintaining the value of
the State-owned assets that were under their management before the
IPO.
With profit the chief target, the State-owned banks must increase
loans, revenue from which is the major source of profit for domestic
banks.
The State-owned banks are following their own business logic as
shareholding companies, despite the central bank's attempts to tighten control
over bank loans through guidance and issuing earmarked notes both non-punitive
means to guide commercial banks.
On the one hand, they now have the same
business goals as other commercial banks liquidity, security and profitability.
They put more money into bank loans or the inter-bank lending market for
profit.
On the other hand, the State-owned banks will probably no longer
play the same role supporting the country's financial sector and supplying
public goods in the financial field.
It is expected that changes will
take place in the business operations of the State-owned banks after they float
on the capital market.
These changes will decide their performance in
the future and the overall economic development trend. A close watch on the
State-owned banks is indispensable to judge the economic situation of
China.
The author is a researcher with the Institute of Finance and
Banking under the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences
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