March 13 (Reuters) – Chinese lenders plan to steer more money toward technology and innovation-oriented firms, bankers say, responding to Beijing’s pledge to aggressively adopt artificial intelligence throughout the economy and dominate emerging sectors.
The credit-allocation shift toward tech is well underway and is set to accelerate further under the government’s plans, unveiled last week, to go all-in on technologies from AI, semiconductors to advanced manufacturing, they said.
At the annual meeting of the National People’s Congress, the country’s top leaders promised generous funding and policy support for tech and innovation over the next five years.
An official at a major state-owned bank told Reuters that tech financing had been made a priority for new loan issuance this year and the lender was stepping up funding to sectors including advanced manufacturing, AI and biotechnology.
The bank is studying whether to roll out new credit options with lower interest rates, especially designed for small- and micro-sized tech startups, said the official, who declined to be named as they were not authorised to speak to the media.
A corporate lending manager at a joint-stock bank in the eastern province of Jiangsu said the lender had targeted 30% growth in new loans to high-tech and innovation companies in 2026, up from around 20% last year.
While this offers banks a fresh source of lending growth as they reel from a debt crisis in the property sector and a slowing economy, analysts warn the nascent nature of the targeted companies and the lack of proper collateral in some cases could pose asset-quality risks.
Outstanding loans to small- and medium-sized tech firms reached 3.63 trillion yuan ($528 billion) at the end of 2025, up 19.8% from a year earlier and outpacing overall loan growth by 13.6 percentage points, according to data from the central bank.
By comparison, the outstanding value of real estate loans fell 1.6% over the same period to 51.95 trillion yuan at the end of last year, underscoring a dramatic reallocation of capital away from the sector that once dominated bank balance sheets.
“This shift is essentially the result of the real estate adjustment combined with policy mandates,” said Xiaoxi Zhang, China finance analyst at Gavekal Dragonomics, adding that the property sector situation was “too severe” to do much lending.
“At the same time, regulators are vigorously promoting technology finance with various assessment targets, so banks are indeed working hard to develop loan products suitable for high-tech companies,” Zhang said.





