Source: http://gata.org/node/6670

China stops its banks from lending to U.S. banks
Submitted by cpowell on Thu, 2008-09-25 04:15. Section: Daily Dispatches

Mainland Lenders Ordered to Halt Interbank Deals with U.S. Firms

By Jane Cai and Adam Chen
South China Morning Post, Hong Kong
Thursday, September 25, 2008

http://www.scmp.com

BEIJING -- Mainland regulators have told domestic banks to stop lending 
to United States financial institutions in the interbank market in a bid 
to prevent possible losses during the financial crisis, industry sources 
said yesterday.

The ban from the China Banking Regulatory Commission (CBRC) applied to 
interbank lending of all currencies to US banks but not to banks from 
other countries, a source said.

The CBRC was not available for comment yesterday.

The decree appears to be Beijing's first attempt to erect defences 
against the deepening US financial meltdown after the mainland's major 
lenders reported billions of US dollars in exposure to the credit crisis.

Lending transactions on the mainland interbank market totalled 10.65 
trillion yuan (HK$12.17 trillion) last year, according to the People's 
Bank of China.

In the first eight months of this year, transactions totalled 10.11 
trillion yuan, up 104 per cent from a year earlier.

At the end of last year, the mainland interbank market had 717 members, 
including banks, securities companies and trust companies.

Another banking source said the CBRC issued the ban after obtaining data 
about the exposure of mainland banks to bonds issued by bankrupt Lehman 
Brothers Holdings.

Top officials said they were keeping a close watch on the crisis and 
warned mainland financial institutions to be cautious in their daily 
business and overseas expansion.

"The international transaction volume of Chinese banks is not big. Those 
concerning subprime loans are probably lower than US$10 billion," deputy 
central bank governor Ma Delun wrote this week in the China Business 
Post, a People's Bank of China-affiliated newspaper.

But the deteriorating situation in the US has shocked top officials.

Mr Ma said that among the unexpected developments was the effect the 
crisis was having on normal assets, not just problematic assets; its 
impact on the whole credit market, not just single products; and its 
effect on Europe and other nations, not only the US.

The exposure of seven listed mainland banks to bonds related to Lehman 
Brothers totalled US$721 million.

Mainland banks had US$9.8 billion in exposure to US subprime loans at 
the end of last year and US$25 billion to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac by 
June 30.

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