China's four asset management companies (AMCs) disposed of 587.6
billion yuan (US$70.8 billion) of bad assets and recovered 120.2
billion yuan (US$14.5 billion) in cash during the first nine months
of this year, the China
Banking Regulatory Commission said Tuesday.
China Huarong disposed of 174.6 billion yuan (US$21.0 billion)
and recovered 35.5 billion yuan (US$4.3 billion) in cash, while
China Great Wall handled 183.2 billion yuan (US$22.1 billion) and
retrieved 19.3 billion yuan (US$2.3 billion), the commission
said.
China Orient disposed of 96.7 billion yuan (US$11.6 billion) and
recovered 21.2 billion yuan (US$2.6 billion), while China Cinda
disposed of 133.1 billion yuan (US$16.0 billion) and recovered 44.2
billion yuan (US$5.3 billion), it said.
China Great Wall announced on Monday that it will sell the
remainder of the company's 150 billion yuan (US$18.1 billion)
assets to both domestic and foreign investors in one package or
several packages, in order to accelerate the disposal of its bad
assets.
The four asset management companies were created in 1999 to take
over a total of 1.4 trillion yuan (US$168 billion) of bad assets
from the country's "Big Four" State-owned banks the Industrial and
Commercial Bank of China, China Construction Bank, Bank of China
and the Agricultural Bank of China.
Asset management company officials have claimed their business
performance was comparable with foreign counterparts.
However, they have long been dogged by accusations of
inefficiency and undervaluing the assets they sell.
The increasingly direct involvement of commercial banks in the
bad assets market has cast further gloom over the future of asset
management companies as the nation's specialized bad assets
managers, analysts said.
But CBRC Chairman Liu Mingkang said earlier this year that
although asset management companies are experiencing some problems
in their systems and operational mechanisms, their level of
professionalism has been improving continuously, and their disposal
work had been fairly smooth.
While confirming the asset management companies' achievement, a
CBRC spokesman said on Monday that the commission would continue to
improve its supervision of commercial banks and try to reduce both
outstanding bad assets and bad assets ratios in coming months.
"The absolute amount of bad assets in the four State-owned banks
was still very big," the spokesman said.
The task of reducing these outstanding bad assets and the bad
assets ratios at major banks has also became increasingly difficult
as the loans to some suspended or cancelled projects would create a
new batch of bad loans.
The central government imposed tight credit curbs and land
controls this year on overheated sectors such as steel, cement and
aluminium, trying to slow down rapid growth in fixed asset
investment and bank loans starting from the second half of last
year.
A big number of steel and cement plants as well as many other
fixed asset projects such as economic development zones and
shopping malls have reportedly been ordered to stop
construction.
Economists have expressed concern that such administrative
measures will not solve the problem, although they had some
immediate impact on slowing down fixed asset investment and bank
loans.
(China Daily October 20, 2004)