BEIJING - China's central bank on Saturday issued a circular on adjusting rules for calculating deposits, which will increase the base of fund available for lending at commercial banks, according to web portal Sina.com.
Starting next year, some interbank deposits, including savings for securities and transaction settlement and savings held by banks for non-deposit-taking financial institutions, will be calculated as regular bank deposits, Sina Finance reported, while posting two photos of a document claimed to be released by the People's Bank of China.
"The above-mentioned deposits will be calculated under the scope of handing in required reserves, but the reserve requirement ratio will temporarily be fixed at zero," the unverified photos read.
At present, large commercial banks in China are required to put aside 20 percent of the total deposits they receive as reserve.
The central bank is not available for comment, but the latest adjustment will raise the base for calculating loan-to-deposit ratio and leaving more fund available for commercial banks to make loans or investment.
Lenders look to attract deposits with goodies
Lenders in China, desperate to attract customers who are finding alternatives for their savings, are turning to giveaways. On offer at one branch in Beijing: An iPhone 6 Plus or a Mercedes-Benz.
Acustomer walks past a Shenzhen Ping An Bank branch in Beijing. During the first 11 months of this year, new deposits of Chinese lenders were 23 percent lower than last year.[Provided to China Daily] |
"Chinese banks are hemorrhaging their deposits," says Rainy Yuan, a Shanghai-based analyst at brokerage Masterlink Securities Corp. "There is no fix for this. All the efforts they made to win savers back will only push up the costs, so it's a losing battle to fight."
Higher returns from Internet funds and investment products such as trusts, combined with the promise of a soaring stock market, have China's banks feeling the drain. They lost 950 billion yuan ($153 billion) of deposits in the three months through September, the first quarterly drop since 1999. In the first 11 months, new deposits were 23 percent lower than in the same period last year, People's Bank of China data show.
China's investors have been pouring money into online money-market funds offered by the likes of Alibaba Group Holding Ltd and Baidu Inc. Yu'ebao, pioneered last year by Alibaba affiliate Alipay, drew 535 billion yuan in its first 15 months of existence from 149 million customers, more than the populations of France and the United Kingdom combined.
Users simply tapped a few buttons on their mobile phones to secure an annual rate of return that soared as high as 6.8 percent before falling to about 4 percent recently.
Meanwhile, households put 12.9 trillion yuan into high yield trust products as of Sept 30, making them the fastest-growing segment of what China defines as shadow banking, or financial activity outside the banking system. Trusts, which allow individuals to invest in real estate and other projects for returns of more than 10 percent, saw assets under management surge more than 10-fold since the start of 2009.
The Shanghai Composite Index's 43 percent surge over the past six months also has savers plunging into equities. In the first week of December, Chinese investors opened almost 600,000 stock-trading accounts, a 62 percent increase over the previous week, according to China Securities Depository and Clearing Co.
To stimulate the economy, the central bank on Nov 21 announced a cut in benchmark interest rates for the first time in more than two years, to 2.75 percent from 3 percent on one year deposits. At the same time, the maximum interest rate banks can pay customers was raised to 20 percent over the benchmark from 10 percent, allowing lenders the biggest leeway to set their own rates in modern Chinese history.
Ping An Bank, China CITIC Bank Corp and Bank of Ningbo Co immediately alerted customers through text messages that they would offer the highest interest rates allowed, or 3.3 percent.
While Beijing-based Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd and its four closest State-controlled peers first decided to pay 3 percent, their plan lasted just two weeks. Some branches in major cities, including Shanghai and Beijing, then boosted one-year deposit rates to the 3.3 percent ceiling.
Zhou Xiaochuan, the central bank governor, had in March pledged to deregulate interest rates fully in one or two years. Moves toward that goal are eroding the cheap deposit base that has for decades helped buoy Chinese banks' profits. Rates fixed by the government created a spread of about 3 percentage points between savings and lending rates. The benchmark one-year lending rate was cut to 5.6 percent in November.
Mid-size and regional lenders will be most affected because unlike State-controlled banks, they lack extensive branch networks to lure retail customers and have to rely on more expensive and volatile funding from wealth-management products, company deposits and interbank borrowings, says Liao Qiang, the Beijing-based director of Standard & Poor's.
"The battle for deposits will only get worse as China moves ahead with interest-rate liberalization, which will drive up banks' funding costs and hurt profit," Liao says.