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Strategies & Market Trends : China Warehouse- More Than Crockery -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: RealMuLan who wrote (4578)3/23/2005 12:58:54 PM
From: RealMuLan  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 6370
 
China to investigate bank loans

MAR. 23 6:12 A.M. ET China's banking watchdog plans to investigate loans made by the country's big state-run banks in the latest attempt to clean up the scandal-ridden financial sector.

Lenders must beef up internal controls and stop making risky decisions for the sake of greater market shares and fatter profits, officials of the China Banking Regulatory Commission said in comments seen Wednesday on the regulator's Web site.

The commission said it plans to step up checks on loans for investment projects, real estate and consumer purchases and will also investigate the banks' nonperforming loans.

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"Some banks have relaxed controls over their branches, enabling them to blindly pursue market share and business profits and neglect risk management," said Che Yingxin, assistant to the commission's chairman.

China's state-owned banks have repeatedly been caught up in scandals resulting in huge losses.

The Bank of China recently was rebuked by the banking watchdog over suspected fraud involving several hundred million yuan (millions of dollars; euros) at a branch in the northeastern city of Harbin.

Government audits last year uncovered a massive lending scandal at the country's biggest commercial bank, the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China.

Last week, the chairman of the China Construction Bank, the country's third biggest lender, stepped down amid unconfirmed reports he is under investigation for allegedly taking bribes.

The bank said the chairman, Zhang Enzhao, who has not made any public statements since his resignation, quit for "personal reasons." The financial magazine Caijing reported in its March 21 edition that Zhang is accused of taking bribes in a lawsuit filed in California.

However, the repeated disclosures of mismanagement and other abuses by top banking officials appear not to have disrupted plans for the banks to restructure and sell shares overseas.

The Construction Bank is expected to raise US$5 billion to US$10 billion (euro3.8 billion to euro7.6 billion) by listing shares in Hong Kong later this year.

Zhou Xiaochuan, chairman of the banking commission, told the state-run newspaper 21st Century Business Herald he was not certain why Zhang resigned.

But Zhou said that he believed it was better for the bank to disclose any problems before it attempts an initial public offering.

"It's better for this to have happened before the prospectus is completed than afterward," the report quoted Zhou as saying in an exclusive interview.

"The impact of this will depend on what on earth is found out about the affair later," he said.

businessweek.com