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Thursday, 6 January, 2005, 07:41 GMT

Profits jump at China's top bank

Woman and child holding Chinese yuan Industrial and Commercial Bank (ICBC), China's biggest lender, has seen an 18% jump in profits during 2004.

The increase in earnings has allowed the firm to write off bad loans and pave the way for a state bailout and eventual stock-market listing.

China is trying to clean up its banking system, which is weighed down by billions of dollars of unpaid loans.

It has already pumped $45bn (£24bn) into two of its largest banks, and has identified ICBC as a recipient of aid.

ICBC's profits were 74.7bn yuan ($9bn; £4.8bn) in 2004, the bank said in a statement.

The percentage of non-performing loans dropped to 19.1%, down about 2 percentage points.

ICBC was founded in 1984 and had total assets of 5.3 trillion yuan at the end of 2003.

China committed to gradually opening up its banking sector when it joined the World Trade Organisation in 2002.




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Related to this story:
China plans renewed bank bailout (03 Dec 04 |  Business )
China gears up for share sell-off (21 Sep 04 |  Business )
2004: China's coming out party (21 Dec 04 |  Business )
Asia to fuel air travel growth (15 Dec 04 |  Business )
China to place duties on textiles (13 Dec 04 |  Business )
Is China's economic miracle in meltdown? (12 May 04 |  Business )

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