China

China Banks Want Rules Relaxed to Ease Covid ‘Loan Logjam’

 

China’s major banks are urging regulators to relax some legal and contractual requirements to free a logjam of loans and other transactions halted by China’s Covid-19 surge.

Lenders in China require documents to be stamped with the seal at the branch counter to disburse larger loans or grant foreign exchange, but lockdowns related to the recent Covid-19 surge mean customers and staff have not been able to meet.

Many bank branches were either closed or were severely understaffed so companies – from small firms to Fortune 500 state-owned enterprises – could not meet documentation requirements, leading to lenders refusing to provide services.

The development worsens the situation for companies, already battling falling demand and supply-chain disruptions caused by the lockdowns, and hampers Beijing’s plans to reverse an economic slowdown through easier availability of credit and bulking up of services.

And even as the Chinese financial hub of Shanghai has eased harsh lockdown rules after the Covid-19 surge, several bankers said it would take time for the backlog of transactions to be cleared and for full banking services to resume.

 

ALSO SEE: China Planning Agency Aims For 33% Renewable Power by 2025

 

 

No Clear-Cut Answers

There are also concerns that another Covid-19 surge could see curbs being imposed again.

Bankers have urged regulators to relax some of the documentation rules, but have not received any clear-cut answers or commitments, according to the sources.

“We had to have discussions in each city with each regulator – which were all having different interpretations,” said one senior banker at a global lender, referring to attempts to seek a relaxation in documentation rules to provide banking services.

The regulators did not provide an official relaxation of policy but in summary said “we will close our eyes, but if there’s a screw-up we will scream and punish you saying how come you didn’t follow the regulations,” he added.

One large state-owned lender was told by regulators they should have had a contingency plan to handle the disruptions caused by the lockdowns, but didn’t allow for any flexibility.

The China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission (CBIRC) did not respond to a request for comment.

 

  • Reuters, with additional editing by George Russell

 

 

READ MORE:

China Asks Banks How to Shield Assets From US Sanctions – FT

China’s Big Five Banks Announce Strong Results

Banks Forecast Weaker Yuan as Drive for Dollars Grows

 

George Russell

George Russell is a freelance writer and editor based in Hong Kong who has lived in Asia since 1996. His work has been published in the Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg, New York Post, Variety, Forbes and the South China Morning Post.

Recent Posts

Trade War Heating Up: China Hits Back After Biden Boosts Tariffs

China announces "anti-dumping penalties" on imports of a US chemical and orders Apple to cut…

3 hours ago

Wall St ‘Steered Billions Into Blacklisted China Firms’ – Nikkei

Chinese companies invested in included the Aviation Industry Corp of China, a defence conglomerate that…

6 hours ago

China Orders Apple to Cut WhatsApp, Threads from App Store

US tech giant said Beijing ordered it to cut the messaging apps because of national…

6 hours ago

Nikkei Slumps, Hang Seng Dips as Middle East Fears Grip

Israel’s missile attack on Iran sent investors heading for safe-haven currencies, gold and crude oil

7 hours ago

Study Shows Half of China’s Big Cities Sinking, Rising Seas Risk

Multi-year satellite study finds 45% of big Chinese cities are subsiding over 3mm a year,…

7 hours ago

US ‘Pressured’ Mexico to Reel Back China EV-Maker Incentives

US lawmakers are worried Chinese automakers will use Mexico as a back door to sell…

21 hours ago