HONG KONG  - Chinese banks are wise to resist maxing out their credit cards. Lenders have issued hundreds of millions of them to local consumers, facilitating debt-fuelled shopping sprees. It’s a lucrative but risky supplement to other types of loans, and some now appear to be pulling back.

Banks in the People’s Republic issued more than 650 million credit cards as of the third quarter of 2018, up from less than 450 million three years earlier, official data show. Balances payable on cards reached 6.6 trillion yuan ($980 billion), an increase of more than 120 percent over the same period. Lenders are keen on the business. There’s a big opportunity for growth given relatively low penetration: the average Chinese individual has only half of a credit card, whereas the average American has three. Plastic can be profitable, too, yielding higher interest rates and fees than typical corporate loans. That boosts net interest margins.

Yet a reassessment may be underway, according to analysts at Citi Research. At Shanghai Pudong Development Bank 600000.SS, for instance, credit card lending made up 35 percent of total new loans in 2017. In the first half of 2018, that figure collapsed to negative 5 percent. It’s a similar story at China Merchants Bank 600036.SS and other lenders covered by the analysts – although some are still aiming at rapid growth, including Ping An Bank 000001.SZ and Postal Savings Bank of China 1658.HK.

Household credit stood at around half of GDP by the middle of last year, up from 18 percent a decade earlier, according to the Bank for International Settlements. Fitch Ratings projects household debt might reach 100 percent of disposable income by 2020, just below the 105 percent ratio in the United States. The current economic slowdown could make bankers' affection for plastic look rash. Individuals tend to default on card debt first, and chasing after them in court is time-consuming, while recovery rates, sometimes estimated at below 16 percent, compare poorly with between 50 percent to 60 percent for corporate borrowers.

The Citi analysts estimate a three percentage- point rise in the unemployment rate would cut households’ debt repayment budget by about 1.2 trillion yuan, equivalent to around 17 percent of the total credit card balance. More caution might be negative for earnings and economic stimulus, but financially prudent.

CONTEXT NEWS

- Chinese banks were expected to have extended 2.8 trillion yuan ($414 billion) in net new loans in January, a median estimate in a Reuters survey of 19 economists showed, up from 1.1 trillion yuan in December. That would mark the highest level since a record 2.9 trillion yuan in January last year. The data is expected to be published by Feb. 15.

(( christopher.beddor@thomsonreuters.com ; Reuters Messaging: christopher.beddor.thomsonreuters.com@reuters.net ))

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