
China Asks Banks to Suspend New Loans to US-Sanctioned Refiners
China's Financial Regulator Orders Banks to Suspend Loans to Sanctioned Refiners
China's National Financial Regulatory Administration (NFRA) has advised the country's largest banks to temporarily suspend new loans to five refiners recently sanctioned by the US over their ties to Iranian oil. According to people familiar with the matter, the NFRA asked banks to review their exposure and business dealings with firms including Hengli Petrochemical (Dalian) Refinery Co., one of China's largest private refiners.
The verbal directive, which came before China entered a long holiday weekend on May 1, contrasts with a May 2 notice from China's Ministry of Commerce, which instructed companies to disregard US sanctions. This was the first time China had deployed a blocking measure introduced in 2021 aimed at protecting its firms from foreign laws it deemed unjustified. For now, banks have been guided not to extend new yuan-denominated credit, though they have also been told not to call in existing loans.
The move highlights the balancing act Beijing faces as it tries to project defiance toward the Trump administration while shielding its largest state-owned banks from US secondary sanctions. Tensions are escalating between the superpowers just weeks before a long-awaited meeting between President Donald Trump and his counterpart Xi Jinping in Beijing on May 14-15.
Read also: Treasury Yields Experience Largest Increase in Two Weeks Following Release of Labor Market Data
Washington's Escalating Efforts to Cut Off Iran
Washington has been ratcheting up efforts to cut off Iranian oil shipments, a vital financial lifeline for Tehran. Late last month, the Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control blacklisted Hengli, targeting a significant and well-connected player in the country's vast crude-processing industry. The US also warned banks they are at risk of secondary sanctions if they support Chinese private refiners that buy Iranian oil.
Chinese Banks' Exposure to Hengli
Chinese banks haven't publicly disclosed their exposure to Hengli, but loan data compiled by Bloomberg show the nation's top four banks - Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd., Agricultural Bank of China Ltd., China Construction Bank Corp., and Bank of China Ltd. - all lent to Hengli as recently as 2018.
Read also: US-Iran Tensions Spark Uptick in Oil Prices Amid Global Market Decline
| Bank | 2018 Loan Amount (RMB) |
|---|---|
| Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd. | 10.3 billion |
| Agricultural Bank of China Ltd. | 5.8 billion |
| China Construction Bank Corp. | 4.2 billion |
| Bank of China Ltd. | 3.4 billion |
The lenders and Hengli didn't respond to requests for comment. While China has often railed against unilateral sanctions, it has in past instances also quietly allowed its largest companies to comply with them, in order to avoid blowback on its own economy. Its largest state banks have a history of complying with US sanctions against Iran, North Korea, and even top officials in Hong Kong to avoid losing access to the US dollar clearing system.
In earlier episodes, Beijing sought to shield its systemically important lenders by channeling Iran-related transactions through China National Petroleum Corp's subsidiary Bank of Kunlun Co., which is currently sanctioned.
Investor Takeaway
Investors should be cautious of potential disruptions in the energy sector due to US-China tensions.
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