China's
biggest listed banks posted results that showed shrinking interest margins
caused first-quarter profits to be near-flat, although there was a glimmer of
hope as the
pace of mounting bad debts slowed at some of the lenders.
pace of mounting bad debts slowed at some of the lenders.
The Big Five
lenders - Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC), China Construction
Bank Corp (CCB), Agricultural Bank of China (AgBank), Bank of China (BoC), and
Bank of Communications Co (BoCom), reported quarterly earnings on Thursday and
Friday.
Their net
interest margins (NIMs) - the difference between interest paid and earned -
slipped, as the country's economy grows at its slowest pace in a quarter
century.
NIMs, a key
gauge of bank profitability, continued to fall across the board in the wake of
Beijing's six successive benchmark interest rate cuts in 2014-15.
ICBC, the
world's largest lender, reported on Friday NIM of 2.12 percent at end-March,
compared to 2.16 percent at end-December. NIM compression was also felt keenly
at BoCom, which saw NIM droop to 1.57 percent at end-March, it's lowest since
at least 2011.
NIMs at BoC,
AgBank and CCB also showed a similar trend and were at their lowest levels
since 2011-2012.
As margins
shrank, profit growth at all five lenders remained near flat, although CCB
outperformed its contemporaries with a 3 percent rise in first-quarter net
profit.
And the margin
slide is likely to continue this year.
The president
of BoC said in March that increasing interest income this year will be
"impossible".
BAD DEBTS
The news
around bad debts was more cheerful, though, with some of the lenders showing a
decline in their non-performing loans (NPLs) ratio.
While CCB and
BoCom reported unchanged bad loan ratios from the quarter before, BoC, AgBank
and ICBC all reported a slight fall in theirs.
The arrest of
the rise in non-performing loan ratios may be a sign that the measures China's
banks have adopted to fight soured debt - from increasing their volume of
write-offs to using Beijing-led debt-for-equity swaps for large struggling
state-owned-enterprises - are working.
But the
struggle this year is not over as analysts predict added pressures from a
cooling economy.
"A lot of
structural adjustments to the economy will put pressure (on banks)," said
Richard Cao, a banks analyst at Guotai Junan Securities (HK).
*Reuters*
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