The total assets of China's banking industry rose 17.3
percent to 43.9 trillion yuan (US$5.48 trillion) at the end of
2006, according to the China Banking Regulatory Commission
(CBRC).
The state-owned "Big Four" banks - Bank of China,
China Construction Bank, the Industrial and Commercial Bank of
China, and the Agricultural Bank of China - make up 51.3 percent of
the total assets, according to CBRC.
Twelve joint-stock commercial banks, including the
Bank of Communications, account for 16.2 percent, city commercial
banks occupy 5.9 percent and the remaining 26.6 percent are covered
by other financial institutions.
However, authoritative sources estimated the total
assets of China's banking industry could top 60 trillion yuan if
those of the People's Bank of China, the central bank, were
included. The figure makes up nearly five percent of the global
total, compared with only one percent ten years ago.
CBRC figures show that China's banking industry had
total liabilities worth 41.71 trillion yuan (US$5.21 trillion) at
the end of last year, up 16.5 percent from the previous
year.
State-owned commercial banks owed 21.27 trillion yuan
of the total debts, up 13.3 percent, and joint-stock commercial
banks had 6.87 trillion yuan, a rise of 22.5 percent. The remaining
13.57 trillion yuan was owed by city commercial banks and other
kinds of financial institutions.
Chinese banks saw a drop in their non-performing loans
last year.
With outstanding non-performing loans at 1.25 trillion
yuan, Chinese commercial banks reported a 7.09 percent ratio of
non-performing loans last year, a drop of 1.52 percent from the
previous year.
However, analysts warned that the ratio of
non-performing loans might rebound as risks are increased by a rise
in the value of individual housing loans.
(Xinhua News Agency February 14, 2007)
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