China Daily

SOEs stress financial risk control

Country highlights deleveragi­ng and capital structure optimizati­on

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BEIJING — Lowering the leverage ratio of State-owned enterprise­s, which are responsibl­e for more than half of corporate debt, will put China into the fast lane of preventing systemic financial risks.

SOEs will take the lead in controllin­g debt level and containing the leverage ratio, and further accelerate the clearing of “zombie enterprise­s,” the Xinhua-run Economic Informatio­n Daily reported, citing a source with the State-owned Assets Supervisio­n and Administra­tion Commission.

At the end of Q1, the leverage ratio of non-financial companies rose to 157.7 percent from 155.1 percent at the end of last year, according to the National Institutio­n for Finance & Developmen­t. SOEs were responsibl­e for about 60 percent of total corporate debt.

To defuse risks from fast corporate debt expansion, China has put deleveragi­ng of SOEs high on its agenda, according to a national financial work conference earlier this month.

“The commission has attached great importance to risk control in central SOEs, and risk prevention provides a solid foundation for stabilizin­g growth,” said Shen Ying, SASAC chief accountant.

To reduce the leverage ratio, SASAC has encouraged enterprise­s to optimize capital structure via public offerings on the stock market, and supported efforts in asset securitiza­tion, she added.

As an important means to reduce SOE leverage, debt-toequity swaps have been accelerate­d, allowing companies with long-term potential to exchange their debt for stocks, SASAC said.

So far, 12 centrally administer­ed SOEs, including China Baowu Steel Group and China First Heavy Industries, have signed such swap agreements, which will help them deal with bad assets and reduce their debt burden.

Local SOEs are also making full use of this approach. Two coal companies in North China’s Shanxi province in March signed debt-to-equity swap agreements with the local Stateasset regulator and China Constructi­on Bank, worth a total of 20 billion yuan ($3 billion).

The deal will not only reduce their leverage ratio, but also facilitate their industrial transforma­tion and upgrading.

Some companies have already received the funding from such swaps, including Huaibei Mining Group and Henan Energy and Chemical Industry Group.

China should also intensify efforts to clear out zombie enterprise­s, or weak businesses that are not viable, usually in industries with severe overcapaci­ty and kept alive only with aid from the government and banks, according to the financial work conference.

 ?? XINHUA ?? A worker operates a machine at a textile company in Baoji, Shannxi province.
XINHUA A worker operates a machine at a textile company in Baoji, Shannxi province.

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