Asian Banking & Finance (July-September 2021)

Page 24

RETAIL BANKING: ASIA PACIFIC

China dominates list of APAC’s biggest banks Meanwhile, Australian banks were displaced as other banks’ assets grew, says S&P.

B

anks from China and Japan continue to be the largest lenders in APAC in terms of assets in a surprisingly strong year despite a ranging pandemic, with the total assets of all of the region’s 50 largest banks expanding in 2021, according to data from S&P Global Market Intelligence. Driven by China’s strong credit growth last year, the Industrial & Commercial Bank of China, China Construction Bank, Agricultural Bank of China, and Bank of China retained their top four positions, with over $17.32t in total assets combined as of 31 December 2020. Almost half, or 22 of the 50 largest banks in APAC came from China, six of which are in the top 10. It was overall a good year for financial institutions (FIs) in the country despite the raging pandemic globally, with yuan loans to banks hitting a fresh record. “As China pulled ahead of other major economies in recovering from the pandemic whilst pivoting toward technological self-reliance and net-zero emissions, total outstanding yuan loans at Chinese financial institutions reached a fresh record as of 2020-end, up 12.82% from a year earlier,” the report said.

Total outstanding yuan loans at Chinese financial institutions reached a fresh record as of end2020

Japan, Korean banks shine Japanese banks trailed China’s big four, with Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group rounding up the top five followed by three other Japanese FIs. A total of nine Japanese FIs made it to the list. There are no changes in the top 10, although there have

Shanghai represents the centre of China’s vast banking market (Source: Henry Chen)

22 ASIAN BANKING AND FINANCE | Q3 2021

been some switching taking place, with Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group and Japan Post Bank swapping their sixth and seventh places, respectively. Meanwhile, Japanese lenders reportedly increased purchases of government bonds and other financial instruments as deposits piled up. This helped offset the impact from sluggish loan growth despite an improved economic outlook. Following China and Japan in the most number of banks in the list is South Korea, with six banks. KB Financial Group was the highest placed at 27th, followed by the Industrial Bank of Korea at 39th. The biggest gainer is China’s Shanghai Pudong Development Bank, with total assets rising to $1.219t. This propelled it to climb to the 12th spot, five spots ahead of its 17th place finish last year. New entrants to the top 50 list came from China and Japan, with the Bank of Ningbo, Mebuki Financial Group and China Bohai Bank ranking 44th, 47th and 49th. Australian banks down Down south, Australia’s own big four all made the list, albeit with three out of four FIs sliding down. Commonwealth Bank of Australia, Westpac Banking Corporation and National Australia Bank ranked 19th, 23rd and 25th, down from their slots in 2020. Only the Australia and New Zealand Banking Group retained its spot, at 20th place.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.