Bangkok Post

Fitch affirms China’s A+ rating with stable outlook

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F itch

Ratings yesterday maintained its A+ rating on China with a stable outlook, citing the strength of the country’s external finances and macroecono­mic record.

“Short-term growth prospects remain favourable, and economic policies have been effective in responding to an array of domestic and external pressures in the past year,’’ Fitch said.

In a Reuters poll of 65 economists, China’s economic growth is expected to reach 6.6% this year, topping the government’s target of around 6.5%.

“But large and rising debt levels across the non-financial sector, combined with the low stand-alone credit quality of Fitch-rated banks in the financial system, remain the most significan­t risk factor for the sovereign rating,’’ Fitch said.

In May, Moody’s Investors Service cut its sovereign ratings on China by a notch, putting them on par with those of Fitch. That move put Standard & Poor’s one step above the two agencies.

Moody’s has said it expects the financial strength of the world’s second-largest economy to erode in coming years as growth slows and debt continues to mount.

Fitch said it expected official aggregate financing excluding equity to rise to 208% of gross domestic product this year versus 201% in 2016 and 114% in 2008.

It estimates that a broader credit measure, which incorporat­es activity not directly captured in the official series, will rise to around 270% at end-2017.

“Household debt remains moderate despite its rapid growth in recent years, but China’s corporate sector has become the most highly indebted among major economies, based on data from the Bank for Internatio­nal Settlement­s,’’ Fitch said.

Chinese banks extended 1.54 trillion yuan ($227 billion) in net new yuan loans in June, well above analysts’ expectatio­ns of 1.2 trillion yuan, and up from 1.11 trillion in May, officials data showed.

The stronger-than-expected loans suggest authoritie­s are maintainin­g support for the real economy, even as they tighten regulation­s to force banks to deleverage.

But household loans accounted for 48% of total new loans in June, down from 55% a month earlier.

The effects of the government’s multiprong­ed crackdown are also showing up in weakened off-balance sheet financing, or shadow banking activity.

Combined trust loans, entrusted loans and undiscount­ed banker’s acceptance­s, which are common forms of shadow banking activity, dipped to 428.8 billion yuan in the second quarter from 2.05 trillion yuan in the first three months, according to Reuters calculatio­ns.

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