- China's big banks post steady profits
- Margins shrink at all four lenders
- NPL ratios hold steady or fall
BEIJING/SHANGHAI, Oct 30 (Reuters) - Four of China's largest five state-owned banks reported steady profits on Friday, but their margins came under pressure from a prolonged property slump and sluggish manufacturing.
The biggest of the country's banks have successfully expanded their fee-based income, the slowing economy means low loan demand has led to thinner margins.
Industrial and Commercial Bank of China Ltd (ICBC), the world's largest bank by assets, reported a 3.29% rise in third-quarter net profit, while China Construction Bank, reported a 4.19% increase over the same period.
Following suit, Agricultural Bank of China Ltd reported a 3.7% rise as Bank of Communications Co Ltd reported a 2.46% increase over the same period.
Analysts say fee-based and trading income have become more important sources of profit for the banks.
ICBC's net trading income for the third quarter was around 8 billion yuan, up 43% on-year, meanwhile CCB's net non-interest income for the first three quarters of this year was up 19% on-year.
But China's economic growth slowed to the weakest pace in a year in the third quarter, with September manufacturing activity shrinking for a sixth straight month.
CCB said in its results that in the first three quarters, "global economic growth remained sluggish, with increasing trade barriers, divergent economic performance among major economies, and uncertainties in inflation outlook and monetary policy adjustments."
This was evident as all four banks reported a narrowing of net interest margin - a key gauge of profitability, with CCB reporting the sharpest fall from 1.4% at the end of June, to 1.36% at the end of September.
And margin shrinkage is likely to continue as wider economic problems persist, said analysts.
"We expect downward pressure on Chinese banks’ NIM to persist into 2026, until there is a meaningful recovery in credit demand," said Karen Wu, CFA, Senior Analyst, Financials, CreditSights.
Asset quality was also likely to deteriorate as endemic issues in the property sector continue to play out in defaults on lenders' books, analysts said.
For the banks that reported on Friday, non-performing loan ratios shrunk slightly or held steady. But for many of the rest of the country's banks, default ratios continue to rise.
The NPL ratio of China's rural commercial banks was 2.77% at the end of the second quarter this year, higher than 1.21% of major state-owned lenders, according to the latest official figures.
"Asset-quality risks remain in the property sector and retail loans," said Wu. "NPLs on property-developer exposures have risen again since 1H25, and we expect retail NPLs to continue increasing over the next 6–12 months, particularly for micro-business and credit card loans."
($1 = 7.1230 Chinese yuan renminbi)
Reporting by Ziyi Tang and Engen Tham; Editing by Christopher Cushing and Jane Merriman
Source: Reuters