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POLITICAL ECONOMY
China banks write off $300 billion in bad loans: official
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) June 23, 2016


19 arrested in China metals exchange probe
Shanghai (AFP) June 23, 2016 - A total of 19 people connected to a troubled Chinese metals exchange have been arrested, authorities said, after repeated protests by disgruntled investors and as the number of cases of financial fraud rise.

Shan Jiuliang, chairman of Fanya Metals Exchange, which managed around 40 billion yuan ($6.2 billion) in assets and claimed to be the world's largest minor metals exchange, was among those accused of illegal fundraising, said a statement on the city government's news portal in Kunming, where it is based.

Fanya offers investors the chance to bet on increasing metal prices, promising some speculators double-digit returns on their investments.

But with commodity prices plunging worldwide, some of the exchange's reported 220,000 investors say they have been unable to withdraw funds since April 2015.

The crisis sparked protests in Beijing and Shanghai, with police detaining hundreds of people in the capital.

Nearly 28,000 Fanya investors have declared 7.8 billion yuan of funds unpaid on a national police website set up in response to widening fraud cases in the country, the statement late Wednesday said.

The platform was first activated after peer-to-peer lending firm Ezubao bilked 900,000 investors out of $7.6 billion by offering high interest rates which it was unable to pay, in what one executive described in a televised confession as a "typical Ponzi scheme".

In May police also arrested 35 executives and employees of Shanghai-based Zhongjin Asset Management after it failed to make payments of 5.2 billion yuan to its 25,000 investors.

Chinese banks have written off more than $300 billion of bad loans in the past three years, an official said Thursday as Beijing seeks to reassure investors that the country can cope with its mounting debt problem.

The giant figure comes as Beijing has made getting credit cheap and easy in an effort to boost slowing growth in the world's second-largest economy.

But analysts have warned that a debt-fuelled rebound might be short-lived and ballooning borrowings risk sparking a financial crisis as bad loans and bond defaults increased.

Wang Shengbang, a high-ranking official with the China Banking Regulatory Commission (CBRC), said the country's banks had seen their non-performing loan ratios rise consistently for four and a half years, reaching 1.75 percent at the end of March.

But they were well-prepared to handle the losses, he said, adding domestic lenders had written off two trillion yuan ($304 billion) of bad loans over the past three years.

"Current figures show the banking sector's operation is generally stable and the risks are under control," he told reporters at a briefing.

"The CBRC took precaution measures in advance and in 2011... required banks to set aside more in provisions while the economy was in an upturn cycle so that we were able to accomodate huge writedowns when the economy was in a downturn cycle," he said.

China's total debt hit 168.48 trillion yuan at the end of last year, equivalent to 249 percent of the national GDP, top government think tank the China Academy of Social Sciences (CASS) has estimated.

The most worrying risks lie in the non-financial corporate sector, particularly in state-owned enterprises (SOEs), Li Yang, a senior CASS researcher said last week.

But none of the officials at Thursday's briefing -- from the central bank, finance ministry, and national planning agency -- addressed questions about SOE debt levels, with the moderator referring the issue to the "relevant authorities".

China's government debt ratio was 41.5 percent of GDP at the end of 2015 if contingent debt -- obligations that authorities are not liable for at present, but could become responsible for -- was included, said Wang Kebing of the finance ministry.


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Previous Report
POLITICAL ECONOMY
China's total debt is more than double GDP: govt economist
Beijing (AFP) June 16, 2016
China's total borrowings were more than double its gross domestic product (GDP) last year, a government economist said, warning that debt linkages between the state and industry could be "fatal" for the world's second largest economy. The country's debt has ballooned as Beijing has made getting credit cheap and easy in an effort to stimulate slowing growth, unleashing a massive, debt-fuelled ... read more


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