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China ratings startup challenges system

Unknown research company carving a name for itself

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BEIJING: A spate of defaults by Chinese borrowers with seemingly impeccable onshore ratings has left antsy investors in the world’s second-largest credit market craving credible research to distinguis­h good debt from bad.

Now a little known startup is seeking to tap that demand and is winning fans.

Though not exactly a household name, Shenzhen-based Ratingdog has slowly been carving out a name for itself within China’s corporate-bond community by flagging risks well before defaults occur.

Some creditors and fund managers, long used to seeing domestic raters assign AAA and AA levels for even defaulters, are turning to independen­t research firms such as Ratingdog to navigate a nascent market amid

a liquidity crisis.

Gaining popularity

The Shenzhen-based startup is challengin­g China’s broken credit-rating system, as authoritie­s try to revamp it with new rules in the wake of the property-market meltdown led by developers including China Evergrande Group.

The tiny credit assessor, which relies on funding from investors rather than issuers, has signed up almost 50,000 registered users – more than a 50-fold jump in less than four years – and its two Wechat accounts have garnered over 150,000 followers.

Investment managers like Li Gen said there’s demand for more such relatively independen­t companies.

“They update ratings more frequently and can provide a perspectiv­e beyond that of traditiona­l agencies,” said Li, chief executive officer of Beijing BG Capital Management Ltd.

“Such new additions will benefit the longterm developmen­t of the credit market.” Started as a part-time gig in 2017 by a group of frustrated buy-side analysts led by Yao Yu, Ratingdog, whose website features a border collie pup named A-bu as its mascot, has today grown into an operation with over 40 staff members.

The firm undertakes unsolicite­d reviews of companies and offers ratings to registered users free of cost, but charges investors for any additional analysis and research reports.

Every weekend, founder Yao answers 50 to 100 questions from investors in the comments

section on one of the Wechat accounts, where he publishes some of the firm’s research. In an interview, 43-year-old Yao said about 40% of his clients are local banks and securities firms, while offshore investors are also increasing­ly keen to use his services.

“There was not enough credit research for many asset management firms, and we started an organisati­on that’s almost like a help group,” Yao said.

Prior to starting Ratingdog, he worked at CSCI Pengyuan Credit Rating Co for 11 years in different roles before moving to China Securities Credit Investment Co in 2015 as general manager of risk control and legal affairs department.

Yao said his firm has come up with about 20 different shades of ratings, almost like the three global majors.

Though there was some buzz around Ratingdog even before the property crisis, it drew the attention of investors in August 2021 when it downgraded Shimao Group Holdings

Ltd and its onshore unit Shanghai Shimao Co from the equivalent of investment grade to high-yield, highlighti­ng credit risks at what was

once one of China’s largest real-estate developers.

Almost a year later, Shimao missed payment on a Us$1bil (Rm4.6bil) dollar note, its first default on a public bond after months of mounting stress, while its onshore unit delayed some domestic payments.

Yet to this day, Shanghai Shimao remains an Aaa-rated entity – practicall­y the same as China’s sovereign – in the eyes of Chinese firm China Lianhe Credit Rating Co, which declined to comment.

In a June report, Lianhe said Shimao is under significan­t payment pressure, but expects recovery in its rental business to supplement cash flow.

“The existing ratings in the Chinese market are highly concentrat­ed in the AA to AAA range, while internatio­nal investors are more used to seeing more granular ratings in the global market to form their investment decisions,” according to Gina Huang, chief executive officer of S&P Global (China) Ratings.

Domestic raters have often been criticised for being overly generous and failing to highlight different shades of credit quality.

While issuer-paid models are common around the world, in China they contribute to ratings skewing higher because of relatively low onshore defaults compared to global markets, and strict listing requiremen­ts until recently.

Both Shenzhen and Shanghai bourses used to require bonds to have ratings of AA or above in order to be listed.

That listing rule was scrapped in updated regulation­s this year as part of regulators’ attempts to address the shortcomin­gs.

But such concerns aren’t new, nor are they specific to China.

Even giants including S&P Global Ratings, Moody’s Investors Service and Fitch Ratings have had their fair share of trouble with regulators and lawmakers.

More than a decade ago, they were partly blamed by regulators for fuelling a housing bubble by handing out top grades on debt tied to risky mortgages, a market that collapsed in 2007 and sparked the global financial crisis. They faced close scrutiny, and even lawsuits in some cases. But in China, authoritie­s have found only limited success.

The default rate of Chinese issuers with top domestic ratings is higher compared to the global market, according to a research note from CSCI Pengyuan in July, which studied default data onshore and globally between 2014-2022.

The report found the average default rate of Aaa-rated bonds over eight years was 4.49% domestical­ly, while the number was 0.13% for those rated by Moody’s.

Regulators including China’s central bank have tightened supervisio­n of the credit rating industry, with rules issued in August 2021 calling for the evaluation of default rates to be at the core of rating mechanisms and encouragin­g issuers to choose more than one agency to conduct ratings.

They have also given approvals to local units of S&P and Fitch, though the two largely confine themselves to monitoring financial institutio­ns.

The new rules also encourage unsolicite­d ratings from agencies and investor-paid services, which is Ratingdog’s business model.

China’s bond market is still in its infancy, and investors and issuers need to be educated on the benefits of more stringent rating processes, said Danny Chen, chief executive officer of Fitch (China) Bohua Credit Ratings Ltd. Rising defaults will lead to deeper changes, said Jim Veneau, head of Asian fixed income at AXA SA.

“Now China is accumulati­ng a default history, so that history will then be utilised in terms of projecting future default probabilit­ies,” said Veneau. “That will ultimately lead to more credit differenti­ation.”

Focused on eyeballs

The growth in Ratingdog’s user base, however, hasn’t translated to a correspond­ing jump in revenue, which it projects to rise sixfold to a modest 30 million yuan (Rm19.8mil) in 2022 from two years ago.

Yao said the company is currently focused more on attracting eyeballs. “The free content doesn’t generate revenues directly, but is still valuable to the company,” said Yao.

“The more free content we have, the more familiar others will be with us and the less we need to spend on marketing.”

Yao acknowledg­ed that it’s difficult to generate revenue from ratings alone, but said he wants to use it as a tool to provide paid services around it.

If the business hits a bottleneck, he could consider new businesses such as creating indexes, he said. But for now, some investors say they have at least one credible alternativ­e.

“In the current onshore market where ratings are disorderly and severely lagging, the market is lacking a pricing basis,” said Li Kai, chief investment officer at Beijing Shengao Fund Management Co.

“New rating agencies such as Ratingdog are valuable and meaningful to investors.” — Bloomberg

 ?? ?? Flagging risks: Children playing in front of a housing complex by Chinese property developer Evergrande. The property-market meltdown has left investors in the world’s second-largest
credit market craving credible research to distinguis­h good debt from bad. - AFP
Flagging risks: Children playing in front of a housing complex by Chinese property developer Evergrande. The property-market meltdown has left investors in the world’s second-largest credit market craving credible research to distinguis­h good debt from bad. - AFP

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