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Global Fund Ratings As Of July 2024


Your Three Minutes In Chinese Rural Financial Institutions: A Thorough Cleanup Could Take a Decade

Consolidation in China's rural banking sector will take a long time but likely pay off.   China still has thousands of rural financial institutions, which make up 14% of the banking system total assets. Many of them are more susceptible to shock and deposits runs than larger peers, and improvement of the sector could reduce vulnerabilities in the financial system.

Most of China's weakest financial institutions (323 out of 337) are rural ones
People's Bank of China rating of financial institutions (scale 1 to 10 and D) as of 2Q 2023….
….these weak rural FIs accounted for less than 1% of the system total assets
Number of FIs Green zone Yellow zone Red zone
(1 to 5) (6 to 7) (8 to 10 and D)
Large banks* 24 23 1 0
(%) 95.8 4.2 0
City commercial banks§ 122 82 26 14
(%) 67.2 21.3 11.5
Rural financial institutions± 3,783 1,770 1,690 323
(%) 46.8 44.7 8.5
Private banks and others 21 16 5 0
(%) 76.2 23.8 0
Foreign banks 42 40 2 0
(%) 95.2 4.8 0
Total 3,992 1,931 1,724 337
(%) 48 43 8
Total assets (%) 100 90.7 7.6 1.7
Note: The ratings span 11 levels, from 1 (safest) to 10 (riskiest) and level D ( in bankruptcy). *Large banks include three policy banks, six state-owned commercial banks, 12 joint-stock commercial banks and three other banks. §Three city commercial banks are grouped into major banks group. ± Rural financial institutions include 1,608 rural commercial banks, 23 rural cooperative banks, 509 rural credit cooperatives and 1,643 village and township banks. Sources: People's Bank of China, National Financial Regulatory Administration, S&P Global Ratings.

What's happening

China is launching further reforms for the country's 3,800 rural financial institutions. Liaoning Rural Commercial Bank will absorb 36 rural banks in Liaoning province under a plan approved on June 20, 2024 by the National Financial Regulatory Administration. This provincial level bank was set up in September 2023 to consolidate 31 rural financial institutions. According to a 2021 report by the People's Bank of China, Liaoning was one of the regions with higher numbers of high-risk financial institutions.

Why it matters

Strengthening rural institutions would improve overall confidence in China's banking system.  Individually, most of the rural financial institutions are insignificant and unlikely to pose a systemic risk to Chinese banking sector. Collectively, stress cases are more common for weak rural financial institutions. Frequent occurrences could weaken the public's confidence in Chinese financial system and may cause regional stress from time to time.

…and deepen risk-management culture.  Chinese authorities will push hard on rural financial institutions reform and clean up to strengthen Chinese financial system stability.

The process could take up to a decade.  We reckon that it would take four to five years to substantially clean up the high-risk rural financial institutions, and it would take another few years to reorganize these lenders and institutionalize changes in corporate governance, management structure and risk culture.

What comes next

Authorities will prioritize riskier institutions for capital injections and balance sheet cleanup.  

Regions with a relatively high level of risky assets, a high number of risky financial institutions, and/or tight liquidity will be prioritized. We expect the authorities to form new institutions to take over weak lenders or encourage the stronger ones to absorb weaker players.

Authorities could also close selected financial institution as in two bankruptcy cases in 2022: that of Liaoyang Rural Commercial Bank, and Liaoning Taizihe Village and Township Bank.

The cleanup process will likely involve write-offs and/or disposal of nonperforming assets on the bank balance sheets and capital injections from local governments, local state-owned enterprises, or other strategic investors. Holders of capital instruments of a failed bank are likely to bear losses, and institutional creditors could also see some haircuts.

This report does not constitute a rating action.

Primary Credit Analyst:Ryan Tsang, CFA, Hong Kong + 852 2533 3532;
ryan.tsang@spglobal.com
Secondary Contacts:Ming Tan, CFA, Singapore + 65 6216 1095;
ming.tan@spglobal.com
Xi Cheng, Shanghai + 852 2533 3582;
xi.cheng@spglobal.com
Phyllis Liu, CFA, FRM, Hong Kong +852 2532 8036;
phyllis.liu@spglobal.com
Yiran Zhong, Hong Kong 25333582;
yiran.zhong@spglobal.com

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