China Daily

SOEs required to lower debt ratios

- By WANG YANFEI wangyanfei@chinadaily.com.cn

The central government is requiring all State-owned enterprise­s to lower their average ratio of liabilitie­s to assets by 2 percentage points by 2020 from 2017 levels, underscori­ng its commitment to promoting deleveragi­ng to fend off financial risk.

An asset-liability constraint mechanism will be built for SOEs to strengthen supervisio­n over their deleveragi­ng moves, under a guideline issued on Thursday by the State Council.

Policymake­rs will establish “red lines” to notify enterprise­s in key sectors of alarming debt levels, the guideline said.

Firms with debt levels exceeding these lines will be put on monitoring lists and required to report reduction goals and deadlines.

The country will continue to promote market-based debtto-equity swap programs, promote debt restructur­ing and help indebted enterprise­s find funding channels, according to the guideline.

The latest guideline sets requiremen­ts for all SOEs, covering a greater number of companies compared to the previous requiremen­ts issued by the State-owned Assets Supervisio­n and Administra­tion Commission earlier this year.

The commission required all centrally administer­ed SOEs to lower their liabilityt­o-asset ratios by 2 percentage points by 2020.

The more detailed requiremen­ts for debt-level control come at a time when authoritie­s are placing greater emphasis on cutting leveraging ratios of debt-laden SOEs.

In some sectors experienci­ng overcapaci­ty, companies have been receiving easy credit from banks as they often enjoy support from local government­s, thus heightenin­g risks to the financial system.

Zeng Gang, a banking researcher at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences said the guideline, which is expected to put leveraging ceilings on debt-laden SOEs, will be helpful in promoting the deleveragi­ng process.

By the end of July, the assetliabi­lity ratio among SOEs nationwide stood at 64.93 percent, which is 1 percentage point lower compared with the same period last year, said the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission.

Liang Zhibing, an economist at the commission’s research institute, said the guideline provides a general direction for future efforts.

“The government does not set a specific one-size-fits-all debt level ceiling for all companies,” said Liang. “The government is expected to take different measures based upon various financial performanc­es of companies.”

As some may question the possibilit­y of a retreat of the deleveragi­ng campaign amid downward economic pressure and rising trade tensions with the United States, no signs point to a possible reverse to earlier efforts, or to using stimulus measures to boost the economy, according to experts.

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