The mountains are high, and the shareholders are far away. China's banks are reporting results that suggest their bad debts are under control and earnings healthy. But where investors don't easily see them, risks are growing. It's at the local level that the problems with China's debt build-up could escalate most rapidly.
The six large and mid-sized lenders that had released half-year figures by August 27 reported an average 15 percent increase in earnings. Non-performing loans were, on average, a mere 0.9 per cent of the total. Look closer, however, and things are more precarious. Take the export-dependent east coast. China Construction Bank increased its charges against future bad debt in the Yangtze River Delta by 52 per cent year on year. China Merchants Bank's reported bad loans in the area increased by 37 per cent, while Shanghai Pudong Development Bank increased its provisions in the three delta provinces by 76 per cent.
Some industries are also a greater cause for concern than the headline numbers suggest. In the over-expanding retail sector, bad debts are rising. Pudong Development Bank reported retail and wholesale bad loans increased by 22 per cent from the year end, CCB by 19 per cent. At China Merchants Bank, the number rose by 48 per cent, and at Industrial Bank 50 per cent. With so many privately owned companies in retail, there is less chance of local or central government stepping in as it might in, say, shipping or steel.
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Lenders and regulators are aware of the risks. CCB chairman Wang Hongzhang warned of the potential for a "hidden crisis", even as his own institution showed no change in its bad debt ratio. That contrast shows how unhelpful reported bad debt numbers have become. Bank investors need to watch for the molehills before they turn into mountains.