10-10-2011, 08:06 AM
The Straits Times
Oct 10, 2011
CAI JIN
A credit crunch brewing in China?
Growing number of SMEs going bust prompts fears of wider financial distress
By Goh Eng Yeow
THE financial problems in Greece and other debt-burdened European countries continued to dominate the headlines but it was concern over China's financial health that triggered a plunge in regional stock markets early last week.
While the Shanghai market was closed last week for China's National Day holiday, the smart money was fidgeting nervously over the growing number of bankruptcies reported among mainland firms and wondering if it was a sign of wider financial distress.
At the epi-centre of China's debt crisis is the coastal city of Wenzhou - a major manufacturing hub - where almost 20 firms have gone bankrupt this year, spurring some businessmen to run away with debts unsettled.
It led to Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao making a two-day visit to the city last week, with Finance Minister Xie Xuren and central bank governor Zhou Xiaochuan, and ordering banks to lend more to cash-strapped firms.
Yet, despite fears that China may be headed for a crash landing, there is little evidence that a major slump is under way.
A key economic indicator - the September purchasing manager's index - showed that its mighty manufacturing sector is back on the growth trajectory for a second straight month after declining from March to July.
Still, investors preferred to take a better safe than sorry attitude.
On Monday and Tuesday last week, they sold out of the Hong Kong market - host to many giant mainland companies - sending the Hang Seng plunging 1,342 points, or 7.6 per cent, to its lowest level since May 2009.
Singapore's Straits Times Index failed to escape lightly either, falling 144 points, or 5.4 per cent, to a 25-month low.
Given the growing influence of China's economy in the region, it is not surprising to find foreign investors had taken fright.
Among the worst-hit counters from the sell-off were the Macau casino operators, which have benefited enormously from the growing number of Chinese high-rollers to the territory.
These included billionaire Stanley Ho's SJM Holdings, which dived by 25.5 per cent, and Sands China - the Macau unit of casino giant Las Vegas Sands - which fell 14.3 per cent on Monday last week.
But local investors ought to exercise caution too, given the exposure which Singapore lenders and firms may have to China.
As of the second quarter, DBS Group Holdings lent $36.9 billion to Hong Kong companies and another $19.1 billion to companies in the rest of Greater China, which include China and Taiwan.
Over the same period, loans to Greater China firms came up to $14.6 billion for OCBC Bank and $7.26 billion for United Overseas Bank.
About 150 mainland firms - or S-chips as they are known here - are listed here and some may be suffering from the same funding stress encountered by Wenzhou firms.
And according to a Goldman Sachs report, Chinese buyers accounted for 8.8 per cent of all sales in Singapore's residential property market in the third quarter, and 28.3 per cent of all transactions by foreigners.
Therefore, if financial stress back home affects their buying here, property prices will suffer.
Still, the jury is out among economists as to whether the credit crunch faced by cash-strapped small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in China would be serious enough to cripple the entire economy.
Credit Suisse economist Dong Tao noted in a recent report that developers and small firms on the mainland had to turn to the grey market to get loans after being frozen out of the banking system.
But to get much-needed credit, they were charged between 14 per cent and 70 per cent in interest, well above bank lending rates.
Although there is no data that captures the size of the shadow banking system, Mr Tao believed loans of up 4 trillion yuan (S$815 billion) could have been made.
Originally, the lenders were businessmen who wanted to get a better return on the paltry deposit rates but this has now spread to include the 'entire industrial chain involving banks, guarantee companies, pawnshops, investment guarantor companies and even state-owned firms'.
Mr Tao noted that what makes the problem worrying is that about 60 per cent of the loans might have been taken up by small and medium-sized property developers.
'Most Chinese developers have never experienced a bear market cycle. They refuse to cut prices in a time when transaction volumes have fallen sharply and continue to pay the high interest rates, hoping that the Chinese government's tightening policy will ease soon,' he said.
CIMB economist Pauline Loong, however, believed that Beijing loses nothing from media coverage of a 'crisis'.
'Anecdotes of fleeing debtors make good colour but colour is not data. The very nature of private lending and the size of China, in our view, means that accurate estimates are next to impossible. And in China where numbers tend to be big, it is easy to lose perspective,' she said.
These loans are short term in nature and are usually raised for working capital needs. 'If a borrower goes bust, the lender soon knows about it. There is no long-term hidden risk,' she added.
So investors can conclude from her analysis that the crisis over an SME credit crunch in China may well be a case of much ado about nothing.
The next few months will tell which economist is right. For investors, a sudden crash in China's economy will be the last thing they want on their lengthening list of worries.
engyeow@sph.com.sg
Oct 10, 2011
CAI JIN
A credit crunch brewing in China?
Growing number of SMEs going bust prompts fears of wider financial distress
By Goh Eng Yeow
THE financial problems in Greece and other debt-burdened European countries continued to dominate the headlines but it was concern over China's financial health that triggered a plunge in regional stock markets early last week.
While the Shanghai market was closed last week for China's National Day holiday, the smart money was fidgeting nervously over the growing number of bankruptcies reported among mainland firms and wondering if it was a sign of wider financial distress.
At the epi-centre of China's debt crisis is the coastal city of Wenzhou - a major manufacturing hub - where almost 20 firms have gone bankrupt this year, spurring some businessmen to run away with debts unsettled.
It led to Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao making a two-day visit to the city last week, with Finance Minister Xie Xuren and central bank governor Zhou Xiaochuan, and ordering banks to lend more to cash-strapped firms.
Yet, despite fears that China may be headed for a crash landing, there is little evidence that a major slump is under way.
A key economic indicator - the September purchasing manager's index - showed that its mighty manufacturing sector is back on the growth trajectory for a second straight month after declining from March to July.
Still, investors preferred to take a better safe than sorry attitude.
On Monday and Tuesday last week, they sold out of the Hong Kong market - host to many giant mainland companies - sending the Hang Seng plunging 1,342 points, or 7.6 per cent, to its lowest level since May 2009.
Singapore's Straits Times Index failed to escape lightly either, falling 144 points, or 5.4 per cent, to a 25-month low.
Given the growing influence of China's economy in the region, it is not surprising to find foreign investors had taken fright.
Among the worst-hit counters from the sell-off were the Macau casino operators, which have benefited enormously from the growing number of Chinese high-rollers to the territory.
These included billionaire Stanley Ho's SJM Holdings, which dived by 25.5 per cent, and Sands China - the Macau unit of casino giant Las Vegas Sands - which fell 14.3 per cent on Monday last week.
But local investors ought to exercise caution too, given the exposure which Singapore lenders and firms may have to China.
As of the second quarter, DBS Group Holdings lent $36.9 billion to Hong Kong companies and another $19.1 billion to companies in the rest of Greater China, which include China and Taiwan.
Over the same period, loans to Greater China firms came up to $14.6 billion for OCBC Bank and $7.26 billion for United Overseas Bank.
About 150 mainland firms - or S-chips as they are known here - are listed here and some may be suffering from the same funding stress encountered by Wenzhou firms.
And according to a Goldman Sachs report, Chinese buyers accounted for 8.8 per cent of all sales in Singapore's residential property market in the third quarter, and 28.3 per cent of all transactions by foreigners.
Therefore, if financial stress back home affects their buying here, property prices will suffer.
Still, the jury is out among economists as to whether the credit crunch faced by cash-strapped small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in China would be serious enough to cripple the entire economy.
Credit Suisse economist Dong Tao noted in a recent report that developers and small firms on the mainland had to turn to the grey market to get loans after being frozen out of the banking system.
But to get much-needed credit, they were charged between 14 per cent and 70 per cent in interest, well above bank lending rates.
Although there is no data that captures the size of the shadow banking system, Mr Tao believed loans of up 4 trillion yuan (S$815 billion) could have been made.
Originally, the lenders were businessmen who wanted to get a better return on the paltry deposit rates but this has now spread to include the 'entire industrial chain involving banks, guarantee companies, pawnshops, investment guarantor companies and even state-owned firms'.
Mr Tao noted that what makes the problem worrying is that about 60 per cent of the loans might have been taken up by small and medium-sized property developers.
'Most Chinese developers have never experienced a bear market cycle. They refuse to cut prices in a time when transaction volumes have fallen sharply and continue to pay the high interest rates, hoping that the Chinese government's tightening policy will ease soon,' he said.
CIMB economist Pauline Loong, however, believed that Beijing loses nothing from media coverage of a 'crisis'.
'Anecdotes of fleeing debtors make good colour but colour is not data. The very nature of private lending and the size of China, in our view, means that accurate estimates are next to impossible. And in China where numbers tend to be big, it is easy to lose perspective,' she said.
These loans are short term in nature and are usually raised for working capital needs. 'If a borrower goes bust, the lender soon knows about it. There is no long-term hidden risk,' she added.
So investors can conclude from her analysis that the crisis over an SME credit crunch in China may well be a case of much ado about nothing.
The next few months will tell which economist is right. For investors, a sudden crash in China's economy will be the last thing they want on their lengthening list of worries.
engyeow@sph.com.sg
My Value Investing Blog: http://sgmusicwhiz.blogspot.com/