BEIJING, March 20 (Xinhua) -- The China Postal
Savings Bank (CPSB) was inaugurated on Tuesday morning, becoming the country's
fifth largest bank.
Approved by China Banking Regulatory Commission
(CBRC) to open for business last December, the new bank is expected to focus on
retailing and intermediary businesses and offer basic financial services in both
urban and rural areas.
The Shanghai Securities News reported the CPSB
completed registration on March 6, with total registered capital of 20 billion
yuan (2.6 billion U.S. dollars).
Post offices in China began to offer postal savings
services in1986 but they had no lending and credit card business.
With its head office in Beijing, the new bank was
preparing to open branches and sub-branches in the first half of this year, the
sources said.
The inauguration marked a substantial step in China's
financial reform, said Liu Andong, chairman of board of the CPSB, at the
inauguration.
"(The establishment of the bank) will enhance the
development of China's banking sector as well as the vast rural areas," he said.
The bank will set up special sections providing
financial services for rural residents and continue strengthening cooperation
with the Agricultural Development Bank of China and other rural financial
institutions.
The bank will also make efforts to make small loans
to rural households and companies.
But he declined to give further details.
Analysts say the establishment of the bank will
improve financial services in rural areas by expanding financing channels.
By the end of 2006, postal savings in China amounted
to 1.6 trillion yuan, the highest after that of the "big four" state-owned
commercial banks -- the Industrial and the Commercial Bank of China, the Bank of
China, the China Construction Bank and the Agricultural Bank of China.
Post offices boasted 36,000 outlets nationwide,
almost 60 percent of them in rural areas, and 270 million account holders.
China's rural financial market was underdeveloped,
according to the State Bureau of Statistics.
The government is seeking to promote rural
development with the "new socialist countryside" program, which aims to improve
agricultural production, living conditions and public administration in rural
areas with their huge population of about 800 million.
It was estimated that the country would need 15
trillion yuan (1.92 trillion U.S. dollars) to fund its new countryside
construction by 2020, most of which would come from financial institutions, but
the rural financial network and services in place in many areas would not meet
the demand.