The world’s biggest banks are even bigger than last year. China has the biggest; Europe has the most.
Once again, Chinese banks top our ranking of the World’s Biggest Banks, with Industrial and Commercial Bank of China reaching a whopping $4 trillion in assets. Asset growth is a big part of this year’s story; the threshold for inclusion among the biggest increased from approximately $590 billion last year to $627 billion. Several banks crossed the threshold of $1 trillion in assets this year: Netherlands-based ING Group at 24th, Canada’s Toronto-Dominion at 25th and Italy’s Unicredit rising to 27th place.
Yet China’s banks still dominate, contributing 13 of the biggest banks—one more than last year, now that China Everbright Bank makes the cut. While the central bank, the People’s Bank of China, had communicated its inclination to reduce leverage in the financial system, policies designed to reduce credit are waning as the economy weakens and trade tension with the United States escalates.
Rather, China’s leaders—now focused on economic growth and financial-market stability—injected liquidity into the system, expanding balance sheets. Asset strength among the top four banks had risen approximately 15% as of December 2017. Granted, some of that is due to currency appreciation; the Chinese renminbi rose approximately 7% versus the dollar in 2017. Yet balance sheet expansion has continued in 2018, as banks have added more credit. Bank lending in the first half of 2018, at RMB9 trillion, was RMB1 trillion higher than the same period last year.
Regionally, European banks contribute the most names to the World’s Biggest, with 21 banks listed this year, one more than last year due to the addition of Banque Federative de Credit Mutuel. In all, eight EU countries make this year’s list, with the UK and France each placing five entities in the rankings. JPMorgan Chase is the largest US bank in the ranking, unchanged from last year, with Bank of America, Wells Fargo and Citigroup, as well as traditional investment banks Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, rounding out the six US banks on our list. Japan contributes four names, with the largest Japanese bank, Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, nudged one spot lower by Bank of China. Australia contributes three banks, down from the four banks in last year’s rankings; National Australia Bank missed the cut.
WORLD’S BIGGEST BANKS 2018 —Global Top 50 |
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Rank |
Company Name |
Country |
Assets ($ Mil.) |
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1 |
Industrial and Commercial Bank of China |
China |
4,006,242 |
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2 |
China Construction Bank |
China |
3,397,688 |
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3 |
Agricultural Bank of China |
China |
3,233,212 |
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4 |
Bank of China |
China |
2,989,653 |
|||||
5 |
Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group |
Japan |
2,815,273 |
|||||
6 |
J.P. Morgan Chase |
United States |
2,533,600 |
|||||
7 |
HSBC Holdings |
United Kingdom |
2,521,771 |
|||||
8 |
China Development Bank |
China |
2,450,812 |
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9 |
BNP Paribas |
France |
2,350,929 |
|||||
10 |
Bank of America |
United States |
2,281,234 |
|||||
11 |
Credit Agricole |
France |
2,114,568 |
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12 |
Wells Fargo |
United States |
1,951,757 |
|||||
13 |
Mizuho Financial Group |
Japan |
1,866,823 |
|||||
14 |
Citigroup |
United States |
1,842,465 |
|||||
15 |
Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group |
Japan |
1,803,215 |
|||||
16 |
Deutsche Bank |
Germany |
1,768,646 |
|||||
17 |
Banco Santander |
Spain |
1,732,154 |
|||||
18 |
Barclays |
United Kingdom |
1,531,189 |
|||||
19 |
Societe Generale |
France |
1,529,261 |
|||||
20 |
Groupe BPCE |
France |
1,510,938 |
|||||
21 |
Bank of Communications |
China |
1,388,024 |
|||||
22 |
Sparkassen-Finanzgruppe (Sparkassen) |
Germany |
1,235,669 |
|||||
23 |
Lloyds Banking Group |
United Kingdom |
1,095,640 |
|||||
24 |
ING Group |
Netherlands |
1,014,989 |
|||||
25 |
TD Bank |
Canada |
1,012,760 |
|||||
26 |
Norichukin Bank |
Japan |
1,005,655 |
|||||
27 |
UniCredit |
Italy |
1,003,562 |
|||||
28 |
The Royal Bank of Scotland Group |
United Kingdom |
997,225 |
|||||
29 |
Industrial Bank |
China |
985,448 |
|||||
30 |
China Merchants Bank |
China |
967,141 |
|||||
31 |
Inesta Sanpaolo |
Italy |
955,675 |
|||||
32 |
Shanghai Pudong Development Bank |
China |
942,509 |
|||||
33 |
Royal Bank of Canada |
Canada |
940,707 |
|||||
34 |
UBS Group |
Switzerland |
939,089 |
|||||
35 |
Goldman Sachs Group |
United States |
916,776 |
|||||
36 |
China Minsheng Bank |
China |
906,396 |
|||||
37 |
China CITIC Bank |
China |
871,935 |
|||||
38 |
Morgan Stanley |
United States |
851,733 |
|||||
39 |
Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria |
Spain |
827,587 |
|||||
40 |
Credit Suisse Group |
Switzerland |
818,172 |
|||||
41 |
Agricultural Development Bank of China |
China |
808,118 |
|||||
42 |
Banque Federaive du Credit Mutuel |
France |
742,605 |
|||||
43 |
Commonwealth Bank of Australia |
Australia |
734,723 |
|||||
44 |
Rabobank |
Netherlands |
723,167 |
|||||
45 |
The Bank of Nova Scotia |
Canada |
709,899 |
|||||
46 |
ANZ Banking Group |
Sweden |
697,527 |
|||||
47 |
Nordea Bank |
Sweden |
697,527 |
|||||
48 |
Westpac Banking Corporation |
Australia |
667,786 |
|||||
49 |
Standard Chartered |
United Kingdom |
663,752 |
|||||
50 |
China Everbright Bank |
China |
627,840 |
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Asset figures from Fitch, Moody’s, and company reports. Ratings valid as of Aug. 17, 2018. |