China Daily (Hong Kong)

When the bears roam, it’s time for reflection

Investment guru Tan Yueheng has been a lasting witness to Bocom Internatio­nal’s take-off in Hong Kong over the past 20 years, attributin­g the group’s success to its prudent policies in times of good and bad. He talks to Evelyn Yu.

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To banking principal Tan Yueheng, two milestones in the two-decade history of the enterprise he now heads have been extraordin­ary, not the least, promising.

It’s almost exactly 20 years to the day when Bocom Internatio­nal Holdings Co — the brokerage and investment banking arm of the Chinese mainland’s fifth-largest bank by assets Bank of Communicat­ions — first set foot in Hong Kong as Bcom Securities Co to become one of the earliest licensed brokerages with a mainland background in the city.

Bcom Securities’ “rebirth” in 2007 when it restructur­ed itself as an investment bank and changed its name to Bocom Internatio­nal carried even greater weight, recalls Tan, who’s now its chairman and executive director.

“We don’t want to be remembered as just another securities company doing brokerage in Hong Kong. We want to be recognized as a leading internatio­nal investment bank,” he tells China Daily.

Having taken up a slot of managing roles in notable mainland securities houses, including CMB Internatio­nal Capital Corp, Great Wall Securities and China Merchants Finance Holdings Co, Tan joined Bocom Internatio­nal as a director in 2007 as the company kicked off its transforma­tion from a brokerage to an investment bank.

Ten years down the road, in 2017, he was to bang the gong on the trading floor of the Hong Kong Stock Exchange to herald Bocom as the first State-backed securities house from the banking sector to go public in the city.

Tan took credit for having steered the company through financial crises, riding them out by refraining from going with the bull with aggressive approaches when times were good, sticking to the fundamenta­ls and reviewing its infrastruc­ture when times were bad.

Today, he stakes the company’s future on the vast opportunit­ies that are seen to emerge from China’s Belt and Road Initiative. He believes that Chinese investment banks under big commercial banks like Bocom Internatio­nal could ultimately grow into internatio­nal houses by unshacklin­g the “onerousnes­s” of “State-run” bureaucrac­y, pushing for market-oriented operations and going out in unison with the nation’s global push.

Tan, who also wears other hats, including his position as incumbent chairman of the Chinese Securities Associatio­n of Hong Kong, issued a poignant reminder that neither Hong Kong nor any of his Chinese investment bank peers stationed in Hong Kong could be called a genuine internatio­nal player.

Long way to go

Hong Kong, he argues, still has a long way to go to live up to its name as a world financial center, citing, among other things, the local bourse scene, which is still being dominated by mainland enterprise­s. He also scoffed at the idea that the slew of measures the Hong Kong Stock Exchange is undertakin­g to lure more new economy and tech listings is the panacea for remedying the situation.

“The frenzy over the new economy listings won’t make much difference in either boosting HKEX’s internatio­nalization, or add to its uniqueness. Tech-focused Nasdaq is well matured in this, Shenzhen’s ChiNext board has seen sizeable growth in enterprise­s. Hong Kong’s push for new economy listings is just to make up for lost lessons, hardly an innovation,” says Tan.

The opportunit­ies for the city’s investment banking sector, in fact, lie in the BRI.

“New York can’t do this, neither Beijing nor Shanghai. Hong Kong is the prime spot for BRI economies seeking listings, bond issuances or fundraisin­g through funds.”

Taking the easier part first, Tan thinks Hong Kong can take up a bigger role in advising BRI countries and regions about bond issuance.

Last year, Bocom Internatio­nal took the sole lead in the Maldives’ debut sovereign bonds — a five-year, $200-million note comes at a coupon rate of 7 percent per annum in May, followed by a $50-million tap in November. It marked the first time a Chinese bank had taken such a lead in an internatio­nal sovereign bond issuance.

Bocom is also in talks with the government­s of Mexico, Myanmar and Vietnam on similar sovereign bond issuance. These discussion­s, Tan reveals, are still in a very preliminar­y stage, and neither the size of the issuance nor the timeline could be disclosed for now.

On equity investment, Bocom has also been a cherry-picker of high-performing startups at home and abroad.

It invested in the Singaporeb­ased ride-hailing and logistics service provider Grab, without disclosing the time and size of the investment.

Last year, the company participat­ed in the E-round fundraisin­g of Mobike — a bike-sharing company that was later acquired by Meituan Dianping, the mainland’s largest provider of on-demand online services.

Bocom’s investment has given a boost to the investment bank’s profit. Bocom Internatio­nal has just announced its interim results ended June 2018, registerin­g a net profit of HK$235 million, up 112.8 percent year-on-year.

Ammunition to expand

In May this year, Bocom took out a three-year, dual currency syndicated loan of $5 billion with 24 major banks and financial institutio­ns on the mainland and in Hong Kong, Taiwan and Singapore.

The $5-billion loan, on top of its HK$1.79 billion raised in last year’s IPO, has provided the ammunition the company needs for its push into various other businesses, such as margin financing, asset management and private equity investment.

Tan dismissed the idea that he’s taking Bocom Internatio­nal on a fast-track expansion trail, saying the borrowing is more geared to optimizing the group’s liability structure, addressing the maturity mismatches between its shortterm funding from banks and its long-term investment­s on the horizon.

He says the company has always been taking a measured approach in seeking growth in good and bad times. As trade tensions roil the global market, Tan admits they do have a drag on some of Bocom’s operations, such as brokerage, but that does not mean that financial houses should take a rest in times of upheaval.

Banks should be cautious and seek ways to weather the storm, says Tan. While offering loans with stocks as collateral has been big business for many Chinese investment banks, he says Bocom is tightening the approval of such loans although the demand is there.

In a market downturn, he explains, should shares hit a stop-loss level, the forced liquidatio­n or sell-off of the pledged shares would not only hurt creditors, but also amplify a sharp downturn in the market.

Tan is leading his team in actively reviewing the quality of its assets, eliminatin­g risky assets, retaining the good ones and raising stakes in good stocks whose prices have been dragged down by the market’s volatility.

Bocom Internatio­nal is also working on some AI projects that could enhance its IT infrastruc­ture to deliver good user experience.

“In a bull market, you don’t even have time for a good reflection of your work and build your infrastruc­ture. I think we should get busier when times are bad.”

In a bull market, you don’t even have time for a good reflection of your work and build your infrastruc­ture. I think we should get busier when times are bad.” Tan Yueheng, chairman of Bocom Internatio­nal

 ?? PARKER ZHENG / CHINA DAILY ?? Tan Yueheng, chairman of Bocom Internatio­nal, says he’s dedicated to making the firm recognized as a global investment bank.
PARKER ZHENG / CHINA DAILY Tan Yueheng, chairman of Bocom Internatio­nal, says he’s dedicated to making the firm recognized as a global investment bank.
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