China's regional banks tarnished by allegations of crimes, bad loans and excessive risk

After more than a decade of freewheeling growth riding the winds of government stimulus, China's small banks have become a financial burden for local authorities and the target of a national anti-corruption campaign.

The situation is especially severe in less developed regions, like Liaoning province, where the coronavirus pandemic and subsequent virus controls have taken a huge toll on regional finances and exposed scores of bad loans in the process.

Xiao Yuanqi, the vice-chairman of China Banking Insurance Regulatory Commission (CBIRC), said last week financial risks associated with small- and medium-sized banks (SMBs) were generally controllable, but "problems still exist" and some lenders are suspected of committing crimes.

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A recent high-profile cash crisis at four rural banks in Henan has highlighted the vulnerability of rural lenders, but the central Chinese province is far from the exception.

The northeastern province of Liaoning epitomises the precarious nature of China's regional banking system, and has been described by CBIRC as the area "hit hardest by financial risks".

Disciplinary action and criminal coercive measures have been taken against 63 SMBs executives since last year, according to a CBIRC briefing in May.

The province has 75 SMBs, including city-based commercial and rural banks.

Over the years, many small Chinese lenders have freely issued loans to major local companies with loose or no credit checks, creating room for corruption, while attaching their liquidity to the financial health of certain firms, according to experts.

"Once these companies can no longer pay the interest, these banks run out of cash immediately," said a Liaoning-based auditor on condition of anonymity.

Occasional rumours of capital crunches have hung over small banks in Liaoning since 2019, sometimes leading to a rush of deposit withdrawals.

The non-performing loan ratio - which measures the rate at which bank loans are not repaid - in Liaoning's financial sector was 5.11 per cent in 2020, according to the official figures released by the provincial government in January.

The overall ratio for the commercial banks in China was 1.91 per cent in the same year, according to CBIRC data.

The Liaoning provincial government has tried to curb risks by consolidating small banks into a single government-owned lender.