Yes. In short, China's way of classifying whether a loan is non-performing or not is... not up to American standards. NPLs are not written down (i.e. slashed in value to reflect the likelihood that the loan will never be repaid, which will result in a charge to the bank's P&L), they are rolled over--this should sound familiar to you, because that is what caused the zombie banking system and the lost decade in Japan. Investors do not trust that China's banks are reflecting this, which is why they trade at a discount to book value (very unusual for banks, which usually trade at a slight premium to book value).
Banks have largely resorted to selling off their bad loans to avoid reporting spikes in NPLs, and the buyers of these loans are the "bad bank" asset managers that @
Edison Chen has referred to in previous posts in this thread.
Here's the bottom line: can we trust that the Chinese banking regulator and Chinese banks are transparent about this issue, and that the numbers they report are real? If so, then the article above should hold, and China should be able to resolve any stress to the financial system in case of an economic crisis. If not, the Chinese system will blow up, since NPLs were hidden, and the problem may be an order of magnitude larger than the analysts (and the Chinese government) expect.
Here's an article from last year on this issue.
http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702304355104579235084041750444
Skepticism on China's Nonperforming Loans
Despite Strong Data, Values of Country's Leading Banks Decline in Reflection of Investor Worries About Credit Quality
By
CYNTHIA KOONS
CONNECT
Updated Dec. 3, 2013 10:00 p.m. ET
China's banks are among the world's healthiest and most profitable, based on their financial statements. But investors aren't convinced.
Nonperforming loans account for less than 1% of total loans, a ratio that has been falling in recent years and is now one of the lowest in the world, according to World Bank data. Despite this, price-to-book values of the country's leading banks have been declining over the past few years, reflecting worries about deteriorating credit quality in China.
"People are very skeptical about the [nonperforming-loan] ratios," said Jim Antos, a banking analyst at Mizuho Securities. "The market is saying: 'We just don't trust the credit-quality trends in China.'"
The reason China's bad-debt levels are so low boils down to the tendency of the country's banks to routinely extend or restructure loans to borrowers, or sell them, rather than admit they have gone bad and record a loss in their accounts, analysts say. While the tactic is also used in the West and was a major source of concern during the financial crisis, it is increasingly prevalent in China, where lending has been booming over the past five years. In the U.S., bad loans are 3.9% of total loans.
"There is a culture of rolling things over when they come due at least once, often more," said Charlene Chu, an analyst at Fitch Ratings. In rolling over a loan, a bank can renew the debt or push out the repayment deadline. "In fact, one of the main functions of China's shadow finance system is to provide temporary credit to facilitate rollovers and interest payments," she added.
China's Yingli Green Energy Holding Co., the world's biggest solar- panel maker by sales, is confident it will be able to roll over its debt with Chinese lenders this year, a spokesman said. There is no suggestion that the company is unable to meet its obligations, but it has recorded losses for more than two years as solar-panel prices have fallen amid a glut. Yingli had $1.2 billion in short-term debt outstanding at the end of September, and rolled over about $1.3 billion of debt that was due in 2012, most of which was owed to Chinese banks, according to filings.
The country's regulators discourage banks from rolling over troubled loans, in an effort to ensure that asset-quality data accurately reflects reality. But the sheer volume of loans this year indicates much of the debt in the system is being rolled over, according to Ms. Chu. In China's banking system, 9.5 trillion Chinese yuan ($1.6 trillion) of new loans will have been given out this year, even after repayments are taken into account, by Fitch's estimates.
Fitch predicts that this year, more than 10 trillion yuan of additional credit will be extended through shadow banking, a system of loosely regulated nonbank lenders like trust companies and pawnbrokers. Banks don't disclose data on rolled-over loans.
Banks need a reason to justify rolling over a loan, particularly if a company can't repay it. But there are ways around the hurdle. "If you can demonstrate other banks are willing to provide the loans to repay yours, then that's a justification for a bank to continue giving a loan," Barclays analyst May Yan said.
When they do roll over loans, Chinese banks sometimes do it in creative ways. To skirt restrictions on rolling over loans, banks cooperate with informal lenders that provide bank customers with short-term loans with high interest rates. That borrowing is used to repay a bank loan on the understanding that the bank will issue a new loan two or three weeks later. Such behavior can, in some instances, lead to bigger corporate-debt burdens.
"You look at the data and it just starts to get ridiculous how high some of the debt burdens are and that can't go on into infinity," Fitch's Ms. Chu said. "But over the short term there's nothing to say that this has to end right now and a lot of it comes down to banks' willingness to continue to extend and rollover credit."
China's economic slowdown has started to hurt industries like shipbuilding, steel and solar power, as well as the more developed east coast, home to cities like Beijing and Shanghai. Nonperforming loans in the first six months of 2013 rose 22% on the east coast from the final six months of 2012, while nonperforming loans in the rest of China declined 5%, according to Bernstein Research.
Nonperforming loan ratios have fallen from 22.4% in 2000, but bad debts are rising, as Bernstein's numbers indicate. This comes as the government is working to rein in lending: In October, net local-currency loans extended in China totaled $83 billion, down 36% from September and the lowest monthly figure all year.
Apart from rolling over bad debt, banks have also sold off soured loans to keep their nonperforming-loan ratios low. For instance, in the first half of this year, China's fifth-largest listed bank,
Bank of Communications Co.
, sold 5.1 billion yuan (US$837 million) of bad loans to an asset-management company that is designed to buy such loans from banks. Without the sale, the bank's nonperforming-loan ratio would have climbed to 1.15%, rather than the 0.99% the lender reported, said Mike Werner, a Bernstein analyst.
"NPL disposals were the key for Bank of Communications to keep NPL balances in check," Mr. Werner said. Bank of Communications declined to comment.
—Wayne Ma and Dinny McMahon contributed to this article.