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Large banks helping small firms access loans

By Jiang Xueqing | China Daily | Updated: 2020-07-08 10:02
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Client managers (right) of China Construction Bank Corp's branch in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, go through loan procedures with small business owners in February. [Photo provided to China Daily]

Compared with some banks that are more willing to lend to well-established small businesses, CCB is paying more attention to those micro and small businesses that have more difficulties obtaining financial support, Yang said.

"We are inclined to help those companies that have trouble obtaining credit lines from other banks," he said.

Agricultural Bank of China Ltd, another large State-owned commercial lender, has also been using multidimensional data through partnerships with many institutions to know clients better via data cross-checking. Two years ago, however, the bank still used a traditional model of lending by conducting assessments based on financial statements and collateral offered by clients.

ABC's Zhejiang branch is now profiling clients mainly based on their existing data at the bank such as account openings, borrowings and settlements, business conditions and data from various government departments. It is also cooperating with e-commerce companies having a specific area of focus and with online government procurement platforms.

"The effects of big data on micro and small-scale enterprises at our bank, whether or not they have borrowed from banks before, are significant. Both the number of our clients with a total credit line up to 10 million yuan per borrower and the outstanding balance of their loans have doubled every year since 2018. More than 90 percent of the growth was contributed by big data-based online products," said Qian Kai, manager of the inclusive finance department at ABC's Zhejiang branch.

"Without these products, we may not be able to properly assess small business clients, especially first-time borrowers, or grant loans to them. Having been in business for only a short time, they are still vulnerable and have no assets as collateral, which means the traditional way of credit evaluation and approval is unavailable to them. But now we have more data to know these clients better. This has fundamentally changed our thinking and methods of providing financial services to micro and small-scale enterprises," he said.

The online lending products of ABC's Zhejiang branch mainly target small businesses with a total credit line up to 10 million yuan per borrower. By the end of May, its average outstanding balance of loans to this kind of business was 2.13 million yuan per borrower, among which the average outstanding balance of collateral-free loans was 400,000 yuan per borrower. Its nonperforming loan ratio of online lending to micro and small enterprises is very low, two years after the branch launched this type of product in May 2018.

Although most parts of the online lending process including loan applications, credit approvals and loan repayments are completed online, client managers still need to conduct on-site investigations to find out whether a client is really producing goods or providing services at the address of his or her registered company. On-site investigations will also help client managers know business owners better, as it is hard to assess their characters and capabilities simply via big data, Qian said.

The bank will build client profiles for those who have applied for online loan products and tell them how much they can borrow without offering collateral, how much they can borrow with collateral and how much the interest rate is in each case. The clients are free to make their own choices according to their actual needs.

"The government is willing to partner with us on data sharing. It's not just because we boosted the local economy by supporting registered companies that pay taxes, but also because we offer loans to different companies at different prices based on their credibility and business conditions," Qian said.

"Those companies that do business and pay taxes honestly will receive collateral-free loans or receive loans at lower interest rates. Those having records of owing taxes or tax evasion, however, will be granted lower credit lines and obtain loans at higher rates. This will incentivize small businesses to clean up their act. In this way, we will develop benign interactions among the government, small businesses and our bank."

China's banking and insurance regulator in Zhejiang province has promoted the government's sharing of data on small businesses with banks and insurers.

"Based on our past experience, the main problem of micro finance is information asymmetry. Although some micro and small business owners have beautiful dreams and qualities of good entrepreneurs, it still takes time for banks to get to know them," said Bao Zuming, head of the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission's Zhejiang office.

To solve this problem, the office launched an online provincial-level platform of comprehensive financial services on Nov 13. The platform gathered a large amount of data from 54 provincial government departments, which accounted for 70 percent of the information on a business that loan officers need to know when they conduct due diligence before making a lending decision.

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