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Banking & finance
EconomyChina Economy

Default in our stars: China’s banks use satellites to track assets with sky-high scrutiny

Analysts say orbital monitoring of sites, property and other assets provides vital data on borrowers

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Chinese banks are increasingly using satellites to evaluate their clients’ terrestrial assets. Photo: Shutterstock
Ralph Jennings

With bad loans and repayment collateral in focus, Chinese banks are increasingly using satellites to evaluate their clients’ terrestrial assets, mounting a hi-tech offensive to safeguard against rising credit risks.

China Merchants Bank and Shanghai Pudong Development Bank started making use of satellites this year, following a 2022 launch by Ping An Bank and a 2020 move into satellite remote-sensing technology by Zhejiang E-Commerce Bank.
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Furthering the trend, the Postal Savings Bank of China and the China-headquartered Chang Guang Satellite Technology sent a jointly developed satellite into space this month, the Economic Observer reported.

Access to satellite-aided remote sensing – an outgrowth of China’s space technology since its commercialisation kicked off in 2014 – helps banks track assets such as property and vehicles for which they intend to lend money or have already made outstanding loans, analysts said.

High-resolution satellite pictures help gauge the status of loan collateral to ensure it remains viable for repossession in case of a loan default, they explained.

“The goal is to reduce non-performing loans and assess better the rural and small business market when traditional credit records may not be complete,” said Liang Yan, a professor of economics at Willamette University in the US.

“My understanding is that some banks use proprietary satellites and remote sensing to monitor borrower-collateral assets – such as agricultural land, construction progress on real estate projects and industrial activity – to assess and control credit risks of their loans,” Liang said.

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The shift towards space-based surveillance comes as some of China’s largest banks continue to grapple with high levels of bad assets in their property-loan portfolios amid an ongoing real estate slump.
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