The US has a higher credit rating than China - mmm...
Fitch
Downgrades China's Credit Rating on Rising Debt Concerns
Global
ratings agency Fitch cut China's long-term local currency credit
rating to A-plus from AA-minus on Tuesday with a stable outlook,
citing financial risks from rapid credit expansion alongside the rise
of shadow banking activity.
9
April, 2013
China
has seen rapid credit expansion as a result of Beijing's stimulus in
2008-09 to counter the global crisis, with the stock of bank loans to
the private sector hitting 135.7 percent of gross domestic product at
end-2012, the third-highest of any Fitch-rated emerging market, the
ratings agency said.
Total
credit in the economy including various forms of "shadow
banking" activity may have hit 198 percent of GDP at end-2012,
up from 125 percent at end-2008, it added.
Fitch
said that the percentage of funding coming from bank loans is
declining. It estimated that only 55 percent of China's new social
financing - which includes bank credit as well as corporate bonds and
trust loans - came from bank loans in the 12 months ended February
2013, down from 76 percent in 2009.
"The
proliferation of other forms of credit beyond bank lending is a
source of growing risk from a financial stability perspective,"
Fitch said.
Chinese
regulators have shown greater concerns over potential risks from off
balance-sheet banking activity.
China's
banking watchdog has ordered banks to strengthen checks on the
underlying assets of a range of wealth management products to ward
off potential risks to the financial system.
"Definitely
the systemic financial risk in China has been increasing steadily in
the past two years," said Wei Yao, China economist at Societe
Generale in Hong Kong.
"This
shadow banking issue could be the trigger for a hard landing or make
the situation worse if Chinese growth starts to decelerate; it's one
of the weakest links in the economy," she said.
Yao
said signs of local government involvement in shadow banking could
only fuel financial risks. Fitch said its calculations showed that
China's overall level of general government debt stood at 49.2
percent of GDP at the end of 2012, roughly in line with the A-grade
median of 51.2 percent.
"China's
public indebtedness is therefore not a weakness, but neither is it a
strength relative to rated peers, underscoring the case for
equalising the foreign currency and local currency ratings," the
statement said.
But
the ratings agency affirmed the country's long-term foreign currency
ratings at A-plus, backed by the strength of China's foreign exchange
reserves, the world's largest. At the end of 2012, the reserves were
$3.31 trillion.
There
is growing evidence that the world's second-largest economy is moving
towards a more sustainable consumption-led growth path, Fitch added

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