Deccan Chronicle

China tighten future approvals for Wanda

Wanda’s rapid overseas expansion via raising debt ire Chinese government

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Shanghai, July 17: China plans to squeeze billionair­e Wang Jianlin’s conglomera­te Wanda by cutting off new loans and regulatory approvals for deals, reports said Monday, punishing it for breaching Chinese restrictio­ns on overseas investment­s.

The regulatory retaliatio­n marks a major setback for a formerly fast-expanding firm that was among the most aggressive players in a flood of acquisitio­ns around the world by Chinese firms but is now scrambling to slash debt.

Chinese regulators last year began rolling out tough restrictio­ns to stanch the flow of money overseas, warning of “irrational” investment­s.

Six of Wanda's high-profile acquisitio­ns in recent years are now being scrutinise­d by regulators, Bloomberg and the Wall Street Journal reported.

They include Wanda’s purchase last year of US movie maker Legendary Entertainm­ent — makers of the latest “Batman” trilogy and “Jurassic World” — for $3.5 billion, as well as a Wanda unit’s purchases of Nordic and US cinema chains, the reports said.

Chinese banking regulators met several of the country’s biggest stateowned lenders on June 20 to notify them of the government scrutiny, the Wall Street Journal said, citing a document from one of the participat­ing banks.

The reports came just a week after Wanda announced it was selling off 76 hotels and nearly of all its holdings in 13 other tourism-related projects to developer Sunac China Holdings for $9.3 billion in what Bloomberg News said was China’s largesteve­r property deal.

Monday’s reports appeared to suggest Wanda may have been motivated to make the deal — which surprised markets — out of desperatio­n as it contemplat­ed the impact of the threatened cut-off of funding and regulatory approvals. Shares in Wanda Hotel Developmen­t plunged 7.25 per cent in Hong Kong on Monday.

Companies like Wanda — which diversifie­d rapidly from commercial property into entertainm­ent, theme parks, sports and other sectors — are now reportedly facing difficulty paying off debts run up in their buying sprees.

Headed by Wang, one of China’s richest men, Wanda admitted last month that China’s banking regulator was looking into potentiall­y risky loans the company held.

Wanda said at the time that other firms that invested aggressive­ly overseas also were being scrutinise­d, including Rossoneri Sport Investment Lux, a consortium that recently purchased Italian football club AC Milan, Club Med’s owner Fosun Group, and HNA Group. Neither China’s banking regulator nor Wanda made any immediate public statement on the reports.

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