Monday, November 16, 2009

Chinese Non-Performing Loans

I came across this very interesting graph of non-performing loans in Chinese state banks. It looks like since the first quarter of 2008 the volume of non-performing loans has declined dramatically. This would address one of my recurring concerns about the future of the Chinese banking sector, but I find myself questioning what it really means. My interpretation of this graph is not that there has been some clean up of Chinese banks, but that they have issued so many new loans that haven’t yet had time to become non-performing that it skews the statistics. I don’t see how there is any other explanation for a two thirds reduction in non-performing loans during an economic collapse!

1 comment:

Unknown said...

If they are operating like the American banking system, the reason that the number of non-conforming loans is low is because they are only regularly analyzing a small subset of all the borrowers. It's easy to have a high performance ratio when you never check to see if the borrowing company is actually meeting any criteria from the loan agreement besides the monthly payments. It would be interesting to know how frequently and what percentage of borrowers they regularly check capital ratios, etc. for.