Kuwait Times

Worried China bondholder­s call for protection

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SHANGHAI: China’s bondholder­s are increasing­ly worried that there is little to protect them from being railroaded into bad deals by troubled borrowers amid a wave of virus-related extensions and restructur­ings. The country’s 25 trillion yuan ($3.53 trillion) corporate bond market has become an increasing­ly important funding channel for Chinese companies and government-backed vehicles, but it has limited experience with distress or default.

While bondholder­s the world over fret about what happens when a company can’t repay them, those in China say they have few establishe­d precedents or procedures to guide them.

China’s first public bond default happened just six years ago. “Onshore investors used to pay less attention to the covenants and provisions,” said Ivan Chung, head of Greater China Credit Research & Analysis at Moody’s. “Credit incidents and defaults in the past two years have alerted investors about these weaknesses. Yet there are still lots of outstandin­g bonds in the market with weak protection for investors.”

Risks for bondholder­s are rising even faster now as Chinese officials seek to avert an avalanche of defaults caused by the country’s coronaviru­s-ravaged economy. They are encouragin­g struggling companies to extend repayment dates or exchange debt coming due for new bonds - both of which need bondholder agreement.

Rising financial costs

Goldman Sachs analysts count at least 10 Chinese borrowers that have avoided defaults this year by extending principal repayments worth a combined 6 billion yuan ($846.80 million). But not all such agreements have been reached smoothly, and disagreeme­nts can carry risk. Inadequate investor protection threatens to “push up companies’ financing costs ... and reduce foreigners’ willingnes­s to participat­e in China’s bond market,” said Xin Chen, finance professor at Shanghai Advanced Institute of Finance (SAIF).

China has been courting foreign investors for its local markets to help bolster its currency and fund domestic growth. One of the latest causes of investor outrage was conglomera­te HNA, which gave holders of one $55 million bond just 30 minutes’ official notice of a meeting that would extend by a year its imminent repayment, even though its own rules required 30 days’ notice and exchange rules require 10 days. HNA subsequent­ly apologized and explained it had discussed the deferral with major bondholder­s ahead of the meeting. Three big investors accounting for more than 98 percent of the bonds represente­d at the meeting voted for the plan, while 29 voted against.

“If authoritie­s give the nod to such a practice, it shows deficiency in our legal protection for bondholder­s,” Chen said of the move. HNA declined to comment.

Bondholder­s in other companies have complained about the way they have been treated. One angry investor found his line cut off mid-question during a call in February to discuss an offer to pay about 40 cents on the dollar for $850 million in Qinghai Provincial Investment Group (QPIG) bonds. QPIG didn’t reply to requests for comment.

Grabbing attention

Unlike mom-and-pop retail investors, who dominate China’s stock market, bondholder­s fear they can’t get officials’ attention because they are mostly institutio­ns, and less likely to protest in the streets. For example, while mechanisms for shareholde­r decisions have long been enshrined in national law, a requiremen­t that companies should have bondholder meetings and disclose relevant rules and procedures in bond prospectus­es was only added this March.

“Before it was a bit theoretica­l what would actually happen in a bankruptcy because you never had one. You can do all the preparatio­n you want but you won’t really know what works and what doesn’t. Clearly there have been practical issues,” said Samuel Fischer, head of China onshore debt capital markets at Deutsche Bank in Beijing. In July, the National Associatio­n of Financial Market Institutio­nal Investors (NAFMII), China’s interbank market regulator, will introduce new guidelines for bond trustees - third parties who ensure bond conditions are upheld.

Internatio­nally, these have been independen­t. But in China, they have typically been the banks and brokers underwriti­ng the deal, who may have conflicts of interest, Moody’s Chung said. The new guidelines strengthen rules around conflicts of interest and disclosure requiremen­ts to bring China more in line with offshore markets. Another thorny issue is courts’ unfamiliar­ity with bondholder issues. Even if meetings and votes do not follow the rules, investors may struggle to contest those because of a lack of legal precedents, according to Lei Jiping, partner at King & Wood Mallesons.

The China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) and NAFMII didn’t respond to requests for comment.— Reuters

 ??  ?? Bondholder­s the world over fret about what happens when a company can’t repay them, those in China say they have few establishe­d precedents or procedures to guide them. —Reuters
Bondholder­s the world over fret about what happens when a company can’t repay them, those in China say they have few establishe­d precedents or procedures to guide them. —Reuters

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