-
Advertisement
Banking & finance
EconomyChina Economy

China expands oversight of major banks amid property sector risks

Beijing continues to impose stricter regulatory standards on major lenders, shielding the financial system from mounting strains

Reading Time:2 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
A signboard of China Zheshang Bank is seen at its branch in Beijing on March 14, 2016. Regulators have now tightened oversight of the bank. Photo: Reuters
Carol Yangin Beijing
China has expanded its list of domestic systemically important banks (D-SIBs) – institutions subject to tighter regulatory standards – as authorities step up macroprudential oversight to safeguard financial stability amid high exposure to property sector debt.
China Zheshang Bank, a joint-stock lender in east China’s Zhejiang province with total assets of 3.35 trillion yuan (US$485 billion), was added to the list released on Friday by the People’s Bank of China and the National Financial Regulatory Administration (NFRA).

The D-SIB list now stands at 21 institutions, up from 19 when it was first published in 2021. It includes six state-owned commercial banks, 10 joint-stock commercial banks and five urban lenders, accounting for the vast majority of the country’s financial assets.

Advertisement

“We will continuously strengthen the supplementary supervision of systemically important banks and promote their safe, sound operation,” the central bank and the regulatory body said in a joint online statement.

The expanded list came as Beijing doubles down on efforts to shore up the banking system, which remains on alert amid a prolonged property market downturn.
Advertisement

So far, Chinese banks have not reported a sharp rise in bad assets. The non-performing loan ratio of commercial banks stood at 1.5 per cent at the end of 2025, unchanged from a year earlier, according to NFRA data. The bad-loan ratio of large commercial banks was 1.22 per cent, and that of joint-stock commercial banks was 1.21 per cent.

Even so, containing spillovers from property sector risks remains a policy priority.

Advertisement
Select Voice
Select Speed
1.00x