Chinese banks' bad news is good news. Agricultural Bank of China reported a 28 per cent increase in bad loans over the last six months of 2014, as its earnings rose a measly 2 per cent year-on-year. The rise in distress signals at the giant lender looks modest compared with what's happening at some smaller rivals. But as Chinese banks start to disclose full-year numbers, this may be a sign of some welcome honesty.
Deteriorating credit quality shows up in three ways at Chinese banks - and all are getting more obvious. Loans classed as "non-performing" increased faster than performing ones at Agricultural Bank, China Citic Bank, China Merchants Bank, and local lender Bank of Chongqing. Overdue loans, an earlier warning signal, have ballooned an average 57 per cent at the four banks since June. And "special mention" loans - regulatory jargon for the borrowers who keep bankers awake at night - expanded 79 per cent at Citic Bank, and more than doubled at Bank of Chongqing.
Since China's economy is slowing, rising bad debts shouldn't be a huge surprise. A preliminary manufacturing manager's survey on March 24 showed companies are the gloomiest they have been since May. Manufacturers and "retail and wholesale" borrowers, including many commodities traders, are among the fastest rising delinquents. For now the numbers in total remain small, though. Agricultural Bank's bad loan ratio is 1.5 per cent, just a shade over the national figure of 1.3 per cent at the end of 2014. Bank of Chongqing's is still just 0.7 per cent.
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The economic slowdown, which China's leaders have hailed as a "new normal," may be giving lenders cover to deliver some bad news. In an example, Agricultural Bank wrote off 29 billion yuan of loans in 2014, triple the amount of the previous year. It's no big bath, but every bit of added candour helps the integrity of Chinese banks' valuations.