Jacob Gu
Fri, September 15, 2023
(Bloomberg) -- An embattled Chinese shadow bank has taken a step closer to receiving potential state-led assistance, entering a partnership agreement with two of the nation’s biggest financial firms.
About a month after Zhongrong International Trust Co. missed payments on scores of investment products, roiling markets, it’s now signed an agreement with Citic Trust Co., a unit of conglomerate Citic Group Corp., and CCB Trust Co., backed by China Construction Bank Corp., the firm said in a statement Friday night.
The agreement provides so-called entrusted management services, Zhongrong said, and is aimed to “improve efficiency.” There was no specific mention of any financial terms or other types of assistance.
China’s government specifically asked Citic Trust and CCB Trust to examine Zhongrong’s books and lead the effort to stabilize its operations, Bloomberg News reported last month.
Read More: China Asks Citic to Examine Finances of Shadow Bank Zhongrong
Publicly acknowledging its troubles, Zhongrong, said Friday that it’s been unable to make payments as scheduled on some products. It blamed unspecified “multiple internal and external factors.”
Zhongrong and closely linked wealth firm Zhongzhi Enterprise Group spurred volatility in financial markets after halting payments on scores of investment products sold to wealthy individuals and companies. The crisis even sparked rare protests in Beijing.
Prior to the troubles becoming public, the National Administration of Financial Regulation established a working group in July to examine risks at Zhongrong, people familiar with the matter said earlier. Almost half of the funds raised by Zhongrong were funneled to its parent or affiliated units, one of the people said.
China’s trust industry is a key alternative funding source for weaker borrowers unable to get regular bank loans such as real estate developers and local government financing vehicles. Trusts pool money from clients and invest them into a variety of instruments and projects.
The sector — which has been severely affected by China’s property downturn — could face losses of the equivalent of $38 billion, according to a Goldman Sachs Group Inc. estimate.
Friday’s statement said that Zhongrong’s debt relationships and legal relationships in relation to trust products won’t be changed by the new pact with the two state-owned firms.
The company will continue to assume trustee responsibilities of the trust products according to relavent laws and contract clauses, Zhongrong said.
Citic Trust had 1.5 trillion yuan ($206 billion) of assets under management while CCB Trust oversaw about 1.4 trillion yuan, recent data show.
The accord takes effect Sept. 15 and lasts for one year, but the companies can negotiate an extension or early termination, according to the statement.
Chinese Developer Sino-Ocean Suspends Offshore Debt Payments
Andrew Monahan
Fri, September 15, 2023
(Bloomberg) -- Chinese state-linked developer Sino-Ocean Group Holding Ltd. has suspended payment on all its offshore borrowings, citing tight liquidity, as the nation’s property debt crisis deepens.
The country’s 25th-largest builder “is fully committed to formulating a viable holistic restructuring of its offshore debts,” Sino-Ocean said in a statement to the Hong Kong stock exchange Friday. Trading on the exchange of eight dollar bonds will be suspended until further notice, but prices for some notes were indicated at least 2 cents lower at about 9 cents and on pace for record lows, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Beijing-based Sino-Ocean, which according to its 2022 annual report owns more than 290 property projects across China and is among the top homesellers in Beijing and Tianjin, also disclosed it has appointed Houlihan Lokey (China) Ltd. as financial adviser and Sidley Austin as legal adviser. Bloomberg News reported last month that Sino-Ocean was in talks with Houlihan.
“In response to mounting liquidity pressures, the Group has been in active dialogues with its creditors and endeavoured to proactively manage its liabilities,” Sino-Ocean said in Friday’s filing. It added that this year the company “has experienced a rapid decline in contracted sales and increased uncertainty in asset disposals and has continuously faced limitations in various financing activities.”
Shares closed down 12%, further paring a record surge logged earlier this week.
Sino-Ocean has been one of the biggest sources of angst in China’s credit market the past several months. Dollar bond prices slumped amid mounting concerns that even property firms with state links weren’t immune from a sector debt crisis that has sparked record defaults.
Once one of the stronger names among the country’s debt-laden developers, its struggles have been a sign of the sector’s ongoing liquidity constraints. That has been amplified recently by the payment struggles at Country Garden Holdings Co., which this year has lost its title as China’s largest builder by sales. Sino-Ocean expanded into a range of operations since it was founded in 1993, including property services, logistics and asset management.
In August, Sino-Ocean won bondholder approval to extend a combined $50.2 million of interest payments for three dollar notes by two months. A unit two weeks ago got creditor clearance to stretch repayment of a 2 billion yuan ($275 million) local note through August 2024 after having lost an initial vote regarding such an extension.
On Thursday, the Credit Derivatives Determinations Committee said it had ruled that Sino-Ocean’s missed payment on dollar debt due 2024 was a failure-to-pay credit event, triggering credit default swaps.
Sino-Ocean’s largest shareholder is state-owned China Life Insurance Co., which held a nearly 30% stake in the Hong Kong-listed firm, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Having a nearly equal stake is Dajia Insurance Group Co., which took over most of the operations of China’s Anbang Insurance Group Co. and has been controlled by a state-run bailout fund.
The builder’s shares have fallen 47% this year and set their most-recent record low last month. The stock rose a daily record of 82% earlier this week as a Sino-Ocean affiliate won a 90-day grace period if any event of default occurs involving a yuan note on which a payment extension was sought.
Andrew Monahan
Fri, September 15, 2023
(Bloomberg) -- Chinese state-linked developer Sino-Ocean Group Holding Ltd. has suspended payment on all its offshore borrowings, citing tight liquidity, as the nation’s property debt crisis deepens.
The country’s 25th-largest builder “is fully committed to formulating a viable holistic restructuring of its offshore debts,” Sino-Ocean said in a statement to the Hong Kong stock exchange Friday. Trading on the exchange of eight dollar bonds will be suspended until further notice, but prices for some notes were indicated at least 2 cents lower at about 9 cents and on pace for record lows, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Beijing-based Sino-Ocean, which according to its 2022 annual report owns more than 290 property projects across China and is among the top homesellers in Beijing and Tianjin, also disclosed it has appointed Houlihan Lokey (China) Ltd. as financial adviser and Sidley Austin as legal adviser. Bloomberg News reported last month that Sino-Ocean was in talks with Houlihan.
“In response to mounting liquidity pressures, the Group has been in active dialogues with its creditors and endeavoured to proactively manage its liabilities,” Sino-Ocean said in Friday’s filing. It added that this year the company “has experienced a rapid decline in contracted sales and increased uncertainty in asset disposals and has continuously faced limitations in various financing activities.”
Shares closed down 12%, further paring a record surge logged earlier this week.
Sino-Ocean has been one of the biggest sources of angst in China’s credit market the past several months. Dollar bond prices slumped amid mounting concerns that even property firms with state links weren’t immune from a sector debt crisis that has sparked record defaults.
Once one of the stronger names among the country’s debt-laden developers, its struggles have been a sign of the sector’s ongoing liquidity constraints. That has been amplified recently by the payment struggles at Country Garden Holdings Co., which this year has lost its title as China’s largest builder by sales. Sino-Ocean expanded into a range of operations since it was founded in 1993, including property services, logistics and asset management.
In August, Sino-Ocean won bondholder approval to extend a combined $50.2 million of interest payments for three dollar notes by two months. A unit two weeks ago got creditor clearance to stretch repayment of a 2 billion yuan ($275 million) local note through August 2024 after having lost an initial vote regarding such an extension.
On Thursday, the Credit Derivatives Determinations Committee said it had ruled that Sino-Ocean’s missed payment on dollar debt due 2024 was a failure-to-pay credit event, triggering credit default swaps.
Sino-Ocean’s largest shareholder is state-owned China Life Insurance Co., which held a nearly 30% stake in the Hong Kong-listed firm, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Having a nearly equal stake is Dajia Insurance Group Co., which took over most of the operations of China’s Anbang Insurance Group Co. and has been controlled by a state-run bailout fund.
The builder’s shares have fallen 47% this year and set their most-recent record low last month. The stock rose a daily record of 82% earlier this week as a Sino-Ocean affiliate won a 90-day grace period if any event of default occurs involving a yuan note on which a payment extension was sought.
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