China officials are reportedly pushing banks to rush loans to cash-strapped real estate developers

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China officials are reportedly pushing banks to rush loans to cash-strapped real estate developers
China is pushing banks to speed up loan approval for property developers, Reuters reported.Liu Junfeng/VCG/Getty Images
  • Officials in China are pushing banks to rush loans for property developers, Reuters reported.
  • The real estate sector is in a downturn, and many lenders are strapped for cash.
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Officials in Beijing are pushing Chinese banks to rush loan approvals for property developers stuck in a prolonged downturn, according to Reuters.

China's real estate woes over the last year have spurred concerns of an impending "Lehman moment" amid slumping property values, declining homebuyer sentiment, and a backlog of unfinished construction projects.

In February, home prices declined for the eighth consecutive month.

Reuters says authorities are testing a "whitelist" mechanism to prop up the sector's cash-strapped developers in a bid to boost sentiment and confidence.

The program, which Reuters said Beijing initiated last week, covers state-backed construction and private developers that require new financing of 1.5 trillion yuan. It allows city governments to recommend residential property development to banks for financial support.

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At the same time though, rushing loan approvals could result in diminished loan quality, the report notes. Authorities see faster loan approval for residential construction as a way to get real estate back on track.

Many Chinese banks have avoided increasing credit exposure to the country's ailing property market. That's limited hopes for a real estate rebound and in turn capped economic growth for several years, given how much the economy depends on the sector.

The banks themselves are also in a slump. Weak consumer sentiment and growth outlooks have tempered loan demand and business. Among China's top five state-backed lenders, three will report smaller net income for the full-year 2023, and the other two will also see lower profits.

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