Central bank proposes breaking up Agricultural Bank   (AP)  Updated: 2006-05-22 13:44  
China's central bank has recommended breaking up the huge but financially 
troubled Agricultural Bank of China, the fourth biggest bank, a newspaper 
reported Monday. 
 A breakup was the "preferred proposal" among several submitted to the Cabinet 
by central bank Gov. Zhou Xiaochuan, the China Business Post said, citing 
unidentified "authoritative channels." 
 The Agricultural Bank has lagged behind China's other major state-owned 
commercial banks, which have been recapitalized by the government and found 
foreign strategic investors. 
 The central bank would turn the Agricultural Bank into a group of 
provincial-level banks, which could let Beijing force provinces to share in the 
cost of shoring up its balance sheet, the Business Post said. 
 The Agricultural Bank's press office didn't immediately respond to requests 
for information. 
 The bank last week reported that its profits for 2005 were 1 billion yuan 
(US$125 million). But the bank says nonperforming loans account for 26 percent 
of its total. 
 According to the newspaper, other proposals on the list resemble the 
treatment given to China's other big banks, which are preparing to raise money 
with stock offerings in Hong Kong.  
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