The Borneo Post

In China, response to pledged share meltdown stirs concern

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SHANGHAI: Scores of Chinese brokers and banks are struggling under the weight of hundreds of billions of dollars worth of loans to companies using their own plummeting shares as collateral.

Southwest Securities, a Chinese securities broker based in Chongqing, said last month in its quarterly earnings report it had to set aside the equivalent of 80 per cent of its profits through September to provide for likely losses because of such loans.

Southwest and its peers are caught in the slow-motion collapse in China of pledged share financing, in which companies’ major shareholde­rs provide shares as collateral for loans.

The practice boomed last year amid a crackdown on shadow banking, but now, as share prices collapse and collateral withers, creditors are suffering.

About US$ 620 billion worth of traded Chinese shares, or 10 per cent of total market capitalisa­tion, has been pledged, mostly by small and medium- sized companies, which have been hit hardest by a slowing economy and the Sino-US trade war.

As key stock indexes fell 20 per cent this year, Chinese authoritie­s urged brokers not to unload shares held as collateral. Listed companies were told not to suspend trading of their stock.

Although authoritie­s are pushing local government­s, brokerages, insurers and fund houses to inject cash into listed companies, the losses could deepen.

“If you want to put out a fire, you should separate the burning barns from the rest,” said Yuan Yuwei, a partner and portfolio manager at Water Wisdom Asset Management.

During the first nine months of 2018, China’s 32 listed brokerages set aside funds for credit losses of more than US$1 billion, double that of the previous year, according to their quarterly reports.

As defaults rose in loans backed by pledged shares, listed brokerages reported a 50 per cent slump in third- quarter profit.

Southwest reported a 62 per cent decline in net profit for the third quarter excluding extraordin­ary items.

It also disclosed a lengthy list of legal disputes involving pledged shares and defaulting borrowers such as jewelry products maker Eastern Gold Jade Co, electronic vision company Jiang Su Proturly Vision Technology Group and Guangdong Golden Glass Technologi­es.

Yuan is worried that government pressure is only creating more risk.

“Now, the government is connecting all the barns,” Yuan said.

“If risks spread further into the financial system, a match box could morph into an atomic bomb.” Death spiral The crisis has brought Pang Da Automobile Trade Co, a car dealer once dubbed China’s ‘King of Dealership­s’, to its knees.

As Pang Da’s shares fell 40 per cent and lenders called for more collateral, its founder and biggest shareholde­r, Pang Qinghua, had to pledge his entire 20 per cent stake.

He borrowed from China Minsheng Banking Corp and Bank of Communicat­ions, among others, according to regulatory filings.

Pang Da once prided itself on distributi­ng more than 70 auto brands – the most in China.

But now it is selling dealership­s.

The group, which has more than 1,000 outlets across China and employs about 30,000 workers, sold five Mercedes-Benz dealership­s in May to a rival, and in August sold another nine that distribute brands including Lexus, Subaru and Volkswagen.

This month, a court froze Pang’s stake in the cash-strapped company in a funding dispute.

“Each and every day, we’re discussing how we can overcome the current crisis,” Pang, also a vice– president of the China Automobile Dealers Associatio­n ( CADA), said in a rare public acknowledg­ement of the company’s woes published by CADA last month.

A Pang Da executive, who declined to be identified because of the sensitivit­y of the matter, said regulators had recently told creditors not to seek repayment to help the dealership wade through the crisis.

That is in line with government calls for financial institutio­ns to tolerate more risks when a private borrower runs into temporary funding trouble.

ButYaleZha­ng,headofShan­ghaibased consultanc­y Automotive Foresight, doubts Pang Da’s headache is temporary.

“The problem seems to be chronic,” Zhang said, citing China’s decelerati­ng car market and a slowing economy.

Han Changming, founder of a rival auto dealer based in southern Fujian Province, put it more bluntly: “Winter is ahead. I think it ( Pang Da) is taking its last breath.”

Pang Da didn’t return requests for an interview.

CADA declined to comment.

If you want to put out a fire, you should separate the burning barns from the rest. Yuan Yuwei, a partner and portfolio manager at Water Wisdom Asset Management

Transmissi­on Banks, which account for an estimated 70 per cent of pledged share financing, haven’t spelled out loss provisions for that side of the business, which represents a much smaller portion of their overall lending.

Those more clearly hurt by loss-making pledged share lending include brokerages such as First Capital Securities, Western Securities and Founder Securities.

Southwest suffered a 242 million yuan ( US$ 34.9 million) loss in collateral value.

Citic Securities, China’s biggest securities broker, set aside 1.2 billion yuan to cover credit losses from January to September.

Answering calls from China’s top leaders, mainland brokerages, insurers and local government­s have over the past few weeks committed more than 500 billion yuan to “relief funds” to ease pledged share risks by buying stock in companies facing margin calls. And the list of such programs, framed as market- oriented, keeps growing.

Investors, meanwhile, are worried about government­backed funds’ propping up private companies.

“The risk is delayed, but not defused.

“Because the shares that are underwater are still on brokers’ balance sheets,” said Hong Hao, chief strategist at BOCOM Internatio­nal.

According to UBS Securities, earnings for companies listed on Shenzhen’s SME board and ChiNext – home to roughly half of pledged shares – declined by 2.8 per cent, and 11.6 per cent, respective­ly in the third quarter, and the brokerage expects the growth weakness to persist.

“The risk stems from share price volatility that can cause a margin call, and a potential forced liquidatio­n,” said Alexious Lee, strategist at CLSA.

Using the start- up board ChiNext to illustrate such risks, he estimates that if the index falls below 1,200 points, about 10 per cent off the current level, a fresh wave of 1.5 trillion yuan worth of pledged shares could trigger calls for their companies to provide more collateral.

Markets have stabilised this month, but Yang Xiaofan, general manager at Wendaotian­xia Investment Co, a hedge fund manager, said it’s too early to declare the crisis over.

“The pledged share ‘death spiral’ is a long-term process that will keep squeezing cash flow of listed firms’ major shareholde­rs,” he said.

“And many over-pledged, cashstrapp­ed small- caps are already toxic assets.”

Developer Zhonghong Holdings, one- fifth of whose stock is pledged against loans, was delisted by the Shenzhen Stock Exchange after its shares traded below face value for more than 20 consecutiv­e days.

That sent the value of its pledged shares to near zero, hurting creditors, who must write off their loans to Zhonghong as losses.

CLSA estimates that another 60 to 100 Chinese stocks are in danger of being delisted.

Wang Qian, banking professor at Tongji University and a chartered financial risk manager, warned that if money is thrown at struggling companies whose shares are still expensive, risk could metastasis­e.

“If you look at the current scale and seriousnes­s of the pledged share issue, plus the backdrop of the trade war ... you cannot rule out the possibilit­y of systemic financial risk,” Wang said. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Logos of Orient Securities are seen near a branch of the company in Shanghai, China. — Reuters photos
Logos of Orient Securities are seen near a branch of the company in Shanghai, China. — Reuters photos
 ??  ?? A man walks past a booth of Southwest Securities at a finance expo in Beijing, China. Southwest Securities, a Chinese securities broker based in Chongqing, said last month in its quarterly earnings report it had to set aside the equivalent of 80 per cent of its profits through September to provide for likely losses because of such loans.
A man walks past a booth of Southwest Securities at a finance expo in Beijing, China. Southwest Securities, a Chinese securities broker based in Chongqing, said last month in its quarterly earnings report it had to set aside the equivalent of 80 per cent of its profits through September to provide for likely losses because of such loans.
 ??  ?? A man rides past a Bank of Communicat­ions branch in Shanghai, China. About US$620 billion worth of traded Chinese shares, or 10 per cent of total market capitalisa­tion, has been pledged, mostly by small and medium-sized companies, which have been hit hardest by a slowing economy and the Sino-US trade war.
A man rides past a Bank of Communicat­ions branch in Shanghai, China. About US$620 billion worth of traded Chinese shares, or 10 per cent of total market capitalisa­tion, has been pledged, mostly by small and medium-sized companies, which have been hit hardest by a slowing economy and the Sino-US trade war.
 ??  ?? Pang Qinghua
Pang Qinghua

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