# China banking
Latest news and articles about China banking
Total: 5 articles found

China’s Small Banks Raise Deposit Rates Ahead of Lunar New Year as Term Deposits Roll Over
Ahead of the Lunar New Year, many Chinese regional and rural banks have raised deposit rates — in some cases to around 2.15% for three‑year large‑denomination products — to capture maturing term deposits. The moves are largely tactical, driven by over 50 trillion yuan of fixed‑term deposits rolling off and by deposit concentration at large banks, and they risk raising funding costs without changing the industry’s longer‑term downward trend in deposit yields.

Bank of Communications Hit by Wave of Provincial Fines as Regulators Tighten Oversight
Since January, Chinese regulators have issued at least 11 penalties against regional branches of the Bank of Communications for widespread compliance and lending violations. The fines, though modest relative to the bank’s size, expose systemic weaknesses in governance and signal tightened regulatory scrutiny across provinces.

Small Chinese Banks Raise Deposit Yields Ahead of Lunar New Year, but Gains Look Transient
Ahead of the Lunar New Year, city and rural commercial banks in China have rolled out limited‑time, high‑minimum deposit products with three‑year yields up to about 2%, outpacing offers from larger banks. The moves are tactical attempts to capture year‑end cashflows and shore up funding, but they are localized, come with restrictions, and are unlikely to signal a sustained rise in nationwide deposit rates.

China’s Small Banks Raise Deposit Stakes: Rural Lenders Lead a Wave of Short‑Term, High‑Threshold CDs
Regional and rural commercial banks in China have aggressively issued short‑term, large‑denomination certificates of deposit and modestly raised one‑to‑three‑year time deposit rates to attract funds ahead of the spring lending season. These moves contrast with state banks’ retrenchment from long‑dated high‑coupon deposits and reflect margin pressure and fierce local competition for deposits.

Forged Seal and a Hidden Channel: How a 3.5bn RMB Loan Became a Bank’s Biggest Loss
A forged corporate seal and a multi‑layered interbank channel enabled the disappearance of Rmb3.5bn in a loan scheme that implicated multiple banks and asset managers. Criminal convictions followed, but a Supreme People’s Court ruling that the deposit was part of an illegal collusion left the originating bank to absorb the loss and restart litigation against several counterparties seeking partial recovery.