BEIJING, Sept. 18 -- At least three large Chinese
commercial banks have disclosed their exposure to the worsening U.S. financial
crisis through bonds issued by investment bank Lehman Brothers, which has filed
for Chapter 11 protection.
China Merchants Bank Wednesday said in a
statement to the Shanghai Stock Exchange that it holds 70 million U.S.
dollars of Lehman Brothers bonds, of which 60 million dollars is
senior debt and the rest subordinated debt.
The bank also said it has not made special provisions
for the book losses on those bonds and will evaluate their potential risks and
disclose further details at a later date.
Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC), the
country's largest State-controlled commercial bank by assets, holds 152 million
dollars in bonds issued by, or linked to, Lehman Brothers.
At press time, ICBC had not issued a statement to the
Shanghai bourse to specify its exposure to Lehman Brothers.
Bank of China (BOC) was also affected by the failure
of Lehman Brothers. BOC holds 75.62 million dollars in bonds issued by the
ailing U.S. investment bank. It also loaned 53.2 million dollar to Lehman
Brothers and its subsidiaries. BOC was reportedly listed as an unsecured
creditor in documents filed by Lehman Brothers at the United States Bankruptcy
Court of the Southern District of New York.
Lehman Brothers, the fourth largest investment bank
in the United States, filed for Chapter 11 protection after efforts to find a
buyer collapsed last Sunday.
Rising concern about the ripple effect of the
deepening U.S. financial crisis plus the gloomy outlook for China's banking
sector has pushed down the prices of Chinese commercial banks' shares in the
past two trading days.
Shares in China Merchants Bank Wednesday dropped
9.96 percent to 14.47 yuan apiece. With its 11 percent plummet on Tuesday, China
Merchants Bank has fallen a total 18.9 percent over the past two trading days.
Bank of China has dropped a total of 14.8 percent
from last Friday to close at 2.97 yuan. Its Hong Kong-listed H shares also fell
4.6 percent yesterday to 2.9 Hong Kong dollars.
China Construction Bank Wednesday plunged 10.09
percent to end at 3.83 yuan, while its H shares also tumbled 8.15 percent to
4.73 Hong Kong dollars.
The latest 27-basis-point cut to the benchmark
lending rate plus the unchanged deposit rate is expected to squeeze bank
earnings by narrowing the interest spread.
Jing Ulrich, chairwoman of China equities at JPMorgan
Securities, yesterday told China Daily: "As China's financial market is not
fully opened yet, the problem of Lehman Brothers is expected to have only an
indirect impact on China's financial sector. An individual Chinese bank's
exposure to the U.S. financial crisis should be seen in the context of its total
assets."
(Source: China Daily)