Los bancos mas grande de China ya estan en su limite de prestamos, limitaran el crecimiento de la economia.
Agricultural Bank, el tercerbanco en tamanio en China ya ha excedido su cuota de prestamos en Noviembre.
Los reguladores revisan los balances de los bancos todos los dias.
La banca no puede otorgar prestamos totales arriba de $1.1 trillones
China's Biggest Banks Said to Approach Full-Year Loan Quotas, Halt Growth
By Bloomberg News - Nov 23, 2010 1:51 AM ET
Agricultural Bank, China’s third-largest lender, has exceeded its lending quota for November, one of the people said without providing details. Photographer: Nelson Ching/Bloomberg
ICBC, China Construction Bank Corp., Bank of China and Agricultural Bank had targeted a combined 3.2 trillion yuan of new loans this year, according to statements from the companies. Photographer: Nelson Ching/Bloomberg
China’s biggest banks are close to reaching annual lending quotas and plan to stop expanding their loan books to avoid exceeding the limits, according to four people with knowledge of the matter.
Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd., Bank of China Ltd. and Agricultural Bank of China Ltd. are only extending new loans as existing ones get repaid, the people said, speaking on condition of anonymity. Lenders are also cutting holdings of discounted bills to make room for longer-term debt, they said.
Regulators are monitoring banks’ loan balances on a daily basis to ensure the official target of 7.5 trillion yuan ($1.1 trillion) in new lending for 2010 isn’t exceeded, the people said. China’s government in the past month stepped up a campaign to limit credit expansion after inflation quickened and property prices surged.
“We don’t think financial regulators will play the chicken this time around,” Lu Ting, an economist at Bank of America Corp., wrote in a note today. “Beijing’s top priority now is to curb inflation and cool down inflation expectations. It is common knowledge that reining in loan growth is key to all efforts.”
In November 2008, China removed an annual quota for new loans and started encouraging lending to revive an economy stung by the global financial crisis. New loans soared to a record $1.4 trillion the following year, fueling property speculation that caused home prices to skyrocket.
Inflation Quickens
Domestic banks extended about 6.9 trillion yuan of new loans this year through October, according to central bank data. The lenders have made close to 600 billion yuan of new loans so far this month, the 21st Century Business Herald reported today. That would bring the total for this year to 7.5 trillion yuan.
China’s inflation accelerated to 4.4 percent in October, the fastest pace in two years. The central bank last month raised interest rates for the first time since 2007, and told banks to set aside more deposits as reserves twice in November, limiting their capacity to lend.
ICBC, China Construction Bank Corp., Bank of China and Agricultural Bank had targeted a combined 3.2 trillion yuan of new loans this year, according to statements from the companies. Agricultural Bank, China’s third-largest lender, has exceeded its lending quota for November, one of the people said without providing details. Spokespeople for the banks either declined to comment or weren’t immediately available.
Discounted Bills
China should return to a “normalized” monetary policy as quantitative easing in the U.S. pumps cash into the world’s fastest-growing economy and fuels price risks, Zhang Jianhua, head of research at the central bank, said this month.
Concerns that the central bank will have to step up measures to contain inflation have pushed the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index down 11 percent from a seven-month high on Nov 8. The gauge dropped 2 percent as of 2:33 p.m. to a six-week low after falling as much as 3.2 percent. The Hang Seng Finance Index lost 2.1 percent.
The government may limit new lending to 6.6 trillion yuan for 2011, a 12 percent decrease from this year’s target, according to an estimate by Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. The firm forecast this year’s new lending will reach 7.7 trillion yuan.
Chinese banks cut their holdings of discounted bills, short-term credits used by smaller companies to finance working capital needs, by 157.4 billion yuan in the third quarter to make room for more profitable longer-term loans, according to central bank data.
The average yield on loans stood at 6.09 percent in September, compared with 3.86 percent for discounted bills, the central bank said this month.
--Luo Jun, with assistance from Sophie Leung in Hong Kong. Editor: Philip Lagerkranser
To contact Bloomberg News staff of this story: Luo Jun in Shanghai at +8621-6104-3036 or
jluo6@bloomberg.net