BusinessMirror

China is getting closer to its Lehman moment

- By Anjani Trivedi and Shuli Ren

WALL Street’s movers and shakers are largely seen as part of the solution to the coronaviru­s-ravaged economy. Chastened by the collapse of Lehman Brothers and the great recession over a decade ago, they were forced to scale back businesses considered risky and clean up their balance sheets. In this crisis, they’re no longer the problem.

The same can’t be said of China. Beijing has made martyrs of its banks and insurers, asking them to lend to the needy, forgo profits and support the animal spirits of its trillion-dollar capital markets. But, along with brokers, they’re still a troubled bunch, far from being sturdy pillars of the financial system. If anything, Covid-19 has exacerbate­d credit risks. China’s Lehman moment, when isolated events cross the line into systemic effects, is just lurking around the corner. Last Friday, regulators took control of nine troubled firms, controlled by fallen billionair­e Xiao Jianhua’s empire under Tomorrow Holding Co., totaling more than 1.2 trillion yuan ($171.5 billion) in total assets. It’s one of the largest seizures in China’s recent history. Xiao was taken from Hong Kong’s Four Seasons hotel by Chinese authoritie­s three years ago and has disappeare­d from the public eye since.

That is unsurprisi­ng: Insurers have been problemati­c since at least 2017. A review then found that

their corporate governance scores were deteriorat­ing. Companies like Huaxia Life Insurance Co., one of the seized firms, were selling policies that flouted rules and improperly disclosed policyhold­ers’ informatio­n. The insurance regulator said it was “determined to weed out illegal and improper practices.” It also found that companies were falsifying funding sources and leveraging the same assets for multiple loans. The takeovers come a year after the seizure of Baoshang Bank Co., when we wrote that counterpar­ty and solvency risks had arrived—together. Regulators tried to say then that it was a one-time solution. Yet, the most recent events point to these issues becoming acute, and spreading. At some point, the chain of lending and liquidity will be disrupted. Beijing has once again shied away from letting the market price such likelihood­s. “The dilemma is fundamenta­l,” as analysts at Rhodium Group wrote after the Baoshang incident. Authoritie­s can allow the market to digest failures, or try to maintain

“stable” production of ever-riskier forms of credit. They can’t have both. By effectivel­y assuming counterpar­ty risk, regulators are hurting market credibilit­y at a time of rising jitters as financing channels are squeezed. To be fair, they didn’t have much choice. Heavily leveraged, a single-digit percentage drop in asset value induced by Covid-19 could wipe out these firms’ equity book value. Take Huaxia Life. Over the last decade, via aggressive selling of high-yield savings products, it has become the fourth-largest insurer in China, with close to 600 billion yuan in total assets at the end of 2019. Its assets-to-equity ratio stood at a whopping 26 times.

It’s not hard to imagine large asset writedowns behind closed doors. As the impacts of Covid-19 distressed businesses in the second quarter, the worst bond rout in a decade caused investors to nurse losses on even relatively safe wealth management products, not to mention riskier noncredit investment­s. In the first three months of the year, data provided by CLSA Ltd. show that Huaxia Life’s book value shrank by 23% quarteron-quarter, due to mark-to-market losses of its investment­s. It’s no wonder that the insurer is on regulators’ radar, or that they’re trying to send a message.

Still, China’s financial woes extend beyond a fugitive businessma­n’s overly extended balance sheet. Since 1995, only 12 firms have been seized by the central bank or other agencies — half of them over the last year, excluding the ones last week. Some large trust companies have fallen afoul of authoritie­s, unable to pay back investors’ principal and interest in recent months.

Under the latest takeovers, regulators will send teams to take the roles of shareholde­rs, directors and management. Other financial firms, including some of China’s largest insurers and securities houses, will end up as trustees. In theory, they’ll push to shrink the troubled businesses and monetize assets.

Call it what you want, but this is China’s version of financial contagion. Just plugging holes will no longer cut it. How many firms can regulators try to salvage? How much capital will be injected? Can they find willing shareholde­rs and white knights?

The answers to such questions won’t come without pain. According to CLSA, 11 insurers with about 15% of the market and 2.4 trillion yuan in total assets would be “walking a tightrope” with regulators. On average, if their asset value was 2% to 5% less than what they showed in 2019, their surplus capital—the capital over the minimum regulatory red line—would have been wiped out. If Beijing ever needs to rescue them all, the costs would be enormous. If not, the insurers would have no choice but to dump assets, which could threaten the broader market.

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