China Eases Car Loan Rules in New Bid to Boost Consumption

12.04.2024

China made it easier to take out loans for buying personal cars as the country looks to its sprawling automotive sector to boost weakening consumer sentiment.

The central bank and financial regulator said loan ratios for gasoline and electric passenger vehicles, including hybrids, can now be independently determined by lending institutions. Previously, the ratio was a blanket 85% for EVs and hybrids, and 80% for conventional cars.

The loan ratio for conventional commercial gasoline vehicles remained unchanged at 70%, while it is 75% for electric or hybrid commercial vehicles and 70% for purchasing second hand cars, according to a statement on Wednesday.

Get caught up on what’s important.

Sign up for the Evening Briefing, Bloomberg’s flagship global daily newsletter

The new rules follow a pledge last month from the head of the National Financial Regulatory Administration to promote consumption by making it easier to get car loans. China has been struggling to re-ignite weak consumer sentiment as a property market slump and gloomy jobs outlook hurt household spending, and has made the trading-in of consumer goods like cars a major policy to boost the economy in the year ahead.

Read More: China Calls for New Appliances, More Vacation to Revive Spending

Still, it’s unclear if the relaxed loan rules will be enough to spur a meaningful increase in demand for big-ticket items like cars. China’s EV market, the world’s biggest, is set to slow for a second year this year amid a weakening economic outlook.

China’s personal auto loan industry had boomed alongside the rapid increase in EV sales. It had an outstanding balance of more than 1 trillion yuan ($138 billion), according to a May 2022 report by S&P Global, from 100 billion yuan at the turn of the century.

Financial institutions can set the ratio, timespan and interest rate for auto loans based on sound risk control, personal credit history and debt repayment ability of the applicant, according to the statement from the People’s Bank of China and the Administration of Financial Supervision.

Lenders should also reduce the costs that may be incurred if customers terminate or breach loan terms to trade in an existing vehicle for a new one, it said.

Analytics on topic
Article
30.08.2024
China and Italy to ‘Relaunch’ Bilateral Ties: Trade and Investment Outlook

In recent years, Italy and China have maintained a strong economic relationship despite Italy’s shift away from the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s visit to Beijing highlighted Italy’s intention to continue fostering cooperation, with a focus on high-value sectors and enhancing trade.

Source: China briefing
Article
29.09.2023
Xi'an and pure mind: how the main city of "Belt and Road" lives

This year marks the 10th anniversary of China’s Belt and Road Initiative — a platform for global cooperation, in which Beijing is actively creating and developing sea and land routes to Asia, Africa and Europe. The starting point of this grandiose project was the city of Xi’an, from which the ancient Silk Road originated.