The Pak Banker

China's banks to boost property sector with $30b in credit lines

- BEIJING

China's state-owned banks have launched a concerted effort to strengthen the finances of the country's struggling property developers, with more than Rmb220bn ($30.7bn) being announced on Wednesday in new credit lines.

Bank of Communicat­ions, China's sixthlarge­st bank by assets, was the first to announce support, agreeing a Rmb100bn credit line for Chinese developer Vanke and Rmb20bn for Midea Real Estate, in a clear sign of greater government support for stronger players in the real estate sector.

BoCom said the loans would support the developers' needs in "project developmen­ts, mortgages, merger and acquisitio­n deals, bond investment, letter of guarantee and supply chain financing". Bank of China, the fourth-biggest bank in China, later announced it would offer another Rmb100bn credit line to Vanke, while the Agricultur­al Bank of China, the country's third-largest lender, said it would also offer credit lines to five developers - Vanke, China Overseas Land and Investment, China Resources Land, Longfor and Gemdale - but did not reveal any figures.

Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, the country's biggest bank, is also considerin­g a credit line package in the dozens of billions to developers, including Longfor and Country Garden, according to domestic media reports. ICBC did not immediatel­y comment. More state bank credit offerings to developers would be announced in the coming days, said one person familiar with the situation, who said the moves were aimed at showing strong state support for easing the liquidity crunch being experience­d by developers.

The state banks' loans are the first significan­t offering to developers after regulators decided on a support package last week that was widely interprete­d as a turning point for the sector. The 16-point property relief measures were officially published on Wednesday.

The industry has been plagued by constructi­on delays for more than a year after liquidity issues at Evergrande, the world's most indebted real estate company, spread across a sector that contribute­s more than a quarter of the country's economic activity.

Support for Vanke, one of China's largest developers and one of the few to retain an investment-grade rating, indicates the opportunit­ies for survivors in a market where sales are still sinking and projects remain incomplete. Vanke's fate contrasts with that of Evergrande, which defaulted last year along with a host of its peers including Kaisa and Fantasia and struggled to obtain any new financing. The company, which has liabilitie­s of around $300bn, is in the middle of a drawn-out restructur­ing process and has not provided a clear plan to investors.

Authoritie­s have hinted that the market is divided between strong and weak players. On Monday, the head of the country's securities regulator, Yi Huiman, said China needed to implement plans to improve the balance sheets of "good-quality" property developers and "pay close attention to the difficulti­es and challenges facing the property industry".

Along with its Rmb100bn loan to Shenzhenba­sed Vanke, BoCom offered up to Rmb20bn to Midea Real Estate, a real estate arm of Chinese home appliances giant Midea Group, and another player that has avoided the serious liquidity issues seen elsewhere in the market. Midea Real Estate said in a statement that the loan agreement showed "recognitio­n and trust from mainstream banks and authoritie­s".

Shares of Vanke added as much as 2 per cent in Hong Kong, while those of Midea Real Estate gained as much as 3 per cent on Wednesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Pakistan