The Bank of East Asia is reorganising its mainland business after suffering a stunning loss in the world’s second-largest economy as efforts to grow its loans in lower tier cities backfired amid delinquencies.
The 101-year old Hong Kong-based lender will shift its expansion towards digital banking and step up its efforts in Tier-1 cities to reduce the risk of non-performing loans on its books, co-chief executive Brian Li said. The decision follows a slump in 2019 earnings to the lowest since the depth of global financial crisis in 2009.
Profit fell by 50 per cent to HK$3.26 billion (US$420 million) last year or HK$0.89 per share, the bank announced on Wednesday. In mainland China, it lost HK$3.55 billion after booking a five-fold jump in provisions for bad loans to HK$7.25 billion. Hong Kong generated a 16.5 per cent increase in profit to HK$5.795 billion.
“We believe the worst is over as we have already made sufficient provision last year,” co-chief executive Brian Li Man-bun said in a teleconference on its financial results. “The provision should reduce in future. Previously, we expanded in lower-tier cities but now we will focus to lend to more clients in the Tier-1 cities.”
More than 90 per cent of the bad loans were related to credit extended to mainland customers including property developers and shopping-centre operators, the bank said. That resulted in a surge in bad-loan ratio from 0.7 per cent to 1.22 per cent. It has since reduced its mainland branches to 98 from 100, it added.
Bank of East Asia reports lowest profit since 2009, Profit fell by half to HK$3.26 billion last year, the lowest level since the depth of global financial crisis in 2009
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