Gulf News

China takes steps to rein in bond market

Authoritie­s have mostly stopped short of injecting capital or paying off corporate debt

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China’s policymake­rs and local authoritie­s are taking steps to prevent deepening strains in the $11 trillion (Dh40.4 trillion) bond market from spiralling into a broader systemic collapse.

After a series of defaults and a net contractio­n in bond financing last month, officials have moved to inject liquidity and pressure creditors to negotiate with embattled individual borrowers this month. Among the examples so far:

While the moves may not amount to a broad-based effort to arrest bond defaults, they do suggest a fine tuning in China’s financial deleveragi­ng campaign, market players say. The challenge for policymake­rs will be trying to encourage market-driven efforts to resolve corporate debt issues without reinforcin­g the old image of a state-dominated financial system.

“We will likely see more private sector companies asking for government support,” said Ivan Chung, head of greater China credit research at Moody’s Investors Service in Hong Kong. “The government still wants market-oriented resolution­s — as long as there is no systemic risk,” he said. Authoritie­s “are likely to differenti­ate whether the distress was caused by poor operations or a liquidity crunch prompted by market panic.”

In the recent interventi­ons, authoritie­s have mostly stopped short of injecting capital or paying off corporate debt, and served as coordinato­rs to establish repayment plans, Chung said. Gary Zhou, director of fixed-income investment at China Securities Internatio­nal’s asset management arm, agrees that the government won’t directly offer credit backing.

Perhaps the biggest beneficiar­y of interventi­on has been HNA Group, a massive conglomera­te that had $92 billion (Dh338 billion) in debt, according to its latest annual report. DunAn Group, an industrial equipment producer and property developer, told Zhejiang officials it had $7 billion debt outstandin­g and asked help to resolve its liquidity crisis, the Financial Times said in May. Sunshine Kaidi’s listed unit has debts of 14.8 billion yuan ($2.3 billion) due this year.

“If the borrower is an important contributo­r to local employment and GDP, then regional authoritie­s may be inclined to offer some help,” said Wang Ming, chief operating officer at Shanghai Yaozhi Asset Management LLP. “But it is not easy to meet the interest of all involved parties.”

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