Posts tagged ‘Chinese banks’

19/12/2014

Chinese Banks Lure Deposits by Offering Goodies for Cash – Businessweek

Banks in the U.S. once gave away toasters and irons to lure depositors. Banks in China are upping the ante. With customers pulling out money and putting it into higher-yielding investments, they are offering Mercedes, iPhones, and daily deliveries of vegetables to sidestep interest rate caps and get people to stash some yuan in savings accounts.

Chinese Banks Offer Goodies for Cash

“Chinese banks are hemorrhaging their deposits,” says Rainy Yuan, an analyst at brokerage Masterlink Securities in Shanghai. China’s banks lost 950 billion yuan ($154 billion) of deposits in the three months through September, the first quarterly drop since 1999. In the first 11 months of the year, new deposits were 23 percent lower than in the same period last year, People’s Bank of China data show. Offering incentives to attract money is not the solution, Yuan says: “There is no fix for this. All the efforts they made to win savers back will only push up the costs, so it’s a losing battle to fight.”

Decline in new deposits in the first 11 months of 2014 vs. the same period last year

Savers seeking higher returns have been pouring money into online money-market funds offered by the e-commerce companies Alibaba Group (BABA) and Baidu (BIDU). One fund, Yu’E Bao, started last year by Alibaba affiliate Alipay, drew 535 billion yuan in its first 15 months of existence from 149 million customers, more than the populations of France and the U.K. combined. Users simply tapped a few buttons on their mobile phones to secure an annual rate of return that climbed as high as 6.8 percent before falling to about 4 percent recently.

Savers can also earn more on their money by moving to high-yield products, the fastest-growing part of the so-called shadow banking system. Households put 12.9 trillion yuan into high-yield trust products as of Sept. 30. Trust companies pool investor capital to put money in real estate and construction projects, or make corporate loans, and promise returns of more than 10 percent. Trust companies have seen assets under management rise more than tenfold since the start of 2009.

The Shanghai Composite Index’s 45 percent surge over the past six months has led people to shift money from banks to stocks. In the first week of December, Chinese investors opened almost 600,000 stock trading accounts, a 62 percent increase over the previous week, according to China Securities Depository & Clearing.

To stimulate the economy, China’s central bank on Nov. 21 announced a cut in benchmark interest rates for the first time in more than two years. That was offset by the central bank’s decision to raise the maximum interest rate banks can pay customers to 20 percent over the benchmark from 10 percent above it. Ping An Bank (000001:CH), China Citic Bank (601998:CH), and Bank of Ningbo (002142:CH) immediately alerted customers through text messages that they would offer the highest rate allowed.

via Chinese Banks Lure Deposits by Offering Goodies for Cash – Businessweek.

19/01/2012

* Chinese banks invest in Indian businesses

In 2011 Chinese banks loaned Mukesh Ambani’s Reliance Mobile $3bn with the condition that it uses Chinese telecoms and energy firms.

This month Chinese banks loaned Anil Ambani’s Reliance Communications $1.2bn with the condition that it uses Chinese telecoms equipment suppliers.

Both parties see these as win-win deals. Indian firms getting loans at lower interest than from local or other banks and China getting more buyers for its technology suppliers.

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-01-17/reliance-communications-to-borrow-1-18-billion-from-china-banks.html

In November 2011, a consortium of banks including some Chinese banks loaned Duke Energy $6bn to buy the largest US electricity utility. Again, part of the deal was joint development with Chinese firms of eco cities and solar technology. Then the Three Gorges Corp acquired Portugal government’s stake in utility EDP.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970203802204577067013608051698.html

From the Chinese pov, not only are they supporting Chinese industries, but they are diversifying from US bonds into ‘bricks and mortor’ assets.

http://www.vancouversun.com/story_print.html?id=5905203&sponsor=

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