China's banking regulator fines 19 banks over $3-billion pledged loan fraud

Reuters  |  BEIJING 

(Reuters) - China's banking regulator has imposed fines of 52.5 million yuan ($8.36-million) on 19 banks in the northwestern province of and the central province of over a 19-billion-yuan ($3-billion) pledged loan fraud, it said on Friday.

It is the third major penalty handed down since the start of the year as the regulator steps up a crackdown on illegal practices to fend off financial risk.

Criminals illegally pledged gold of low purity to obtain loans from banks, including branches of large state lenders Industrial and Commercial of Ltd and Postal Savings of Co, the regulator said.

The findings highlight the lack of internal controls and of loans and collateral at the banks involved, the (CBRC) said in an

"The banks were overly obsessed with pursuing the scale and speed of business development, without knowing their customers," it added.

Poor risk assessment and weak legal infrastructure leave Chinese banks suffering from rampant "ghost collateral" - security that appears to be on the books, but which, upon closer inspection, is not there or is worth less than it seems.

Last week, the regulator fined 12 lenders after uncovering illegal trading of 7.9 billion yuan of bills.

Three PSBC branches involved in the pledged loan fraud were fined 10 million yuan, while four ICBC branches were fined 6.5 million yuan in total, the regulator said.

It also punished 104 employees involved in the case, the regulator added.

($1=6.2815 Chinese yuan renminbi)

(Reporting by Shu Zhang and Ryan Woo; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, February 02 2018. 15:58 IST