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China Warns of Rising Financial Risks

Dec. 26, 2012
Bank lending has been rising ‘at a high speed’ in recent years and the quality is yet to be tested, Li Yong, vice finance minister said.

BEIJING -- Due to soaring bank loans, with lending to the property sector and local governments a particular concern, China's financial system is facing increasing, the finance ministry warned Wednesday.

Bank lending has been rising "at a high speed" in recent years and the quality is yet to be tested, Li Yong, vice finance minister, was quoted in a statement as saying.

"There are rather high potential risks, particularly in (loans extended to) the real-estate sector and its related industries and in the poorly designed maturity of lending granted to local government financing vehicles," he said, without elaborating.

He made the remarks at a national financial work conference earlier this month, according to the statement.

Chinese banks extended 7.75 trillion yuan (US$1.2 trillion) in new loans in the first 11 months of the year, 919.1 billion yuan more than the same period last year, official data showed.

Lending to the property sector totaled 982.1 billion yuan in the first three quarters of the year, 10.2 billion yuan less than the same period in 2011, according to the latest central bank quarterly report.

China has for the past two years sought to tighten policies on the property sector to rein in rising home prices.

Measures included limits on second and third home purchases, higher minimum down payments, and annual taxes in some cities on multiple and non-locally-owned homes. These dampened speculation and strained developers' cash flow.

The National Audit Office last year put the debt held by local governments at 10.7 trillion yuan at the end of 2010, or about 27% of China's gross domestic product that year.

Some economists have said most of the debt was cheap medium to long-term loans granted by commercial banks, according to previous media reports.

Li also said China's economic growth was set to slow over the long term due to sluggish foreign demand, insufficient domestic consumption, rising labor costs and increasing resource and environment constraints.

The world's second-largest economy has slowed for seven consecutive quarters. It expanded 7.4% in the three months ended September 30, its worst performance since the first quarter of 2009.

The government has cut its target to 7% annually for the five years through 2015.

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2012

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