The People's Bank of China (PBOC) gave four reasons Sunday to
explain the fast growth of bank loans in the first quarter of this
year.
At the end of the first quarter, China reported total loans of
20.6 trillion yuan (US$2.575 trillion), up 14.7 percent over the
previous year. The increase rate is 1.7 percentage points over the
same period last year.
In the first quarter, domestic banks fulfilled roughly half of
their lending targets for the whole year, adding 1.26 trillion yuan
(US$156.25 billion) in loans, up 13.98 percent from a year ago.
"Fast economic and fixed-assets-investment growth brought a
strong demand for bank loans," said the spokesman.
China's economy, fueled by strong investment, soared by a
higher-than-expected 10.2 percent in the first quarter despite
macro-control measures.
The foreign trade surplus also continued to grow in the first
three months and the increasing foreign exchange reserves meant
more currency supply for banks to lend loans, he said. Statistics
showed that the trade surplus reached US$23.3 billion in the first
quarter.
Another reason for the fast loan growth was that commercial
banks were seeking for greater profits through lending more money
to businesses.
Commercial banks chose to lend loans earlier in the year than
before in a bid to gain profits earlier, resulting in the rapid
fulfillment of lending targets in the first quarter, explained the
spokesman.
The loan growth rate has been higher in the first half year than
in the second half since 2003, he added.
In order to cool the soaring economy through loan control, the
central bank announced on April 28 a rise in the 12-month loan rate
from 5.58 percent to 5.85 percent.
The PBOC would rigidly control bank loans to industries with
overheated investment and lend more money in support of weak links
in the economy, the spokesman said.
(Xinhua News Agency May 15, 2006)