Bohai Bank to sell US$3.5 billion in loans to China’s bad banks in bid to shore up capital

China’s banks have been struggling with rising bad debt after a real estate market slump and as the economy struggles to regain momentum. Margins have also narrowed to record lows after lenders were called on by Beijing to help businesses and consumers with cheap loans.

The assets for sale incurred a loss before tax of 1.58 billion yuan in 2023, the filing said, compared with the lender’s profit of 5.08 billion yuan.

Liao Zhiming, chief banking analyst at China Merchants Securities, said the assets for sale should include both NPLs and special-mention loans.

Bad asset disposal “remains a key measure for the bank to strive to clear out risks as soon as possible and improve its balance sheet,” he said, noting the discount of the sale is “not very low”.

Bohai Bank said the initial minimum consideration of the transfer will be 17.7 billion yuan, a 40 per cent discount off the 29 billion yuan aggregate amount of the assets after including interest payment, penalty and judicial fees. It hasn’t entered any agreement with the potential buyers, it said, adding they may or may not participate in the tender.

The lender expects to complete the sale in batches, with exact dates yet to be determined. It will use the proceeds to replenish working capital as well as boost its asset quality and capital buffers.

Bohai Bank’s bad loan ratio rose to a four-year high of 1.78 per cent at end-2023. Its capital adequacy ratio was 11.58 per cent as of end-December, while core-tier 1 capital adequacy ratio was 8.17 per cent, compared with regulatory requirements of 8 per cent and 5 per cent respectively.