China Credit Wreck Exposes Governance Failings

2023-09-07 | Commodities , Current Affairs , Forex , Futures , Precious Metals , Securities , Spot Indices

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Today’s News

In recent events, Dalian Wanda Group Co. indicated to bondholders that everything was fine. The USD 400 million it owed them would be paid in full. A few days later, some creditors were warned that the company was, in fact, USD 200 million short which triggered a mass frantic sell-off in the debt.

However, moments later, just as quickly, lenders were informed that there was indeed enough cash, sending the bonds surging as quickly as it tumbled. Wanda would ultimately make the July debt payments. But Dhiraj Bajaj, who is Lombard Odier (Singapore) Ltd.’s head of Asian fixed income, says the incident and others like it have left him deeply wary of investing in China moving forward.

This is becoming an increasingly common refrain in the financial community. As dozens of debt-saddled property companies, including industry giant Country Garden Holdings Co., struggle to stave off defaults, international money managers say that it’s the weak and arguably worsening governance and disclosure practices that are putting them off mainland borrowers in the long run.

That could lead to diminishing access to financing and higher borrowing costs for years to come, experts warn, causing further fractures to China’s already sputtering economy.

Other related news include:

China Avoids Relying On Stimulus To Boost Economy

China has taken a series of incremental steps to boost its economy after a run of disappointing data showed the government is increasingly at risk of missing its growth target of about 5% for this year. But Beijing isn’t pulling out a “bazooka” stimulus package like it did during the global financial crisis in 2008-09, or even when the pandemic hit in 2020.

Source: Asia Times

Much of the reluctance lies in a drive by President Xi Jinping’s government to control the growth of debt in the country, especially at the municipal level; a desire to shrink the property sector’s outsized influence on the economy; and an aversion to doling out cash to consumers.

Speculative Buying Causes Massive Property Surge

Speculative bets that Chinese authorities will widen support for the property sector have sent some of the country’s ailing developers surging by the most on record.

Source: Bloomberg

Chinese builders gained nearly 10% yesterday, the most in more than a month. Heavily indebted developers with depressed valuations were among those to rally the most, with Sunac China Holdings Ltd. soaring at 68% alongside a spike in trading volume. China Evergrande Group closed up by 83%, capping the biggest gain since its 2009 listing.

U.S. Remains Resilient Despite China Slowdown

China’s stumbling recovery this year has produced a string of reassurances that the impact on the U.S. of even a sharp downturn in the world’s second-largest economy will prove limited.

Source: CNBC

Just last month, economists at Wells Fargo estimated that if China’s total output dropped by a cumulative 12.5% over three years, U.S. growth would dip 0.2 percentage point in 2025. And Nobel laureate economist Paul Krugman recently concluded that, as to whether a debacle in China similar to the U.S. crisis of 2008-2009 would “pretty clearly” not result in major global spillovers.

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TODAY’S NEWS The ongoing selloff in global bonds intensified on Wednesday, weighing on Wall Street stocks and bolstering the dollar as robust U.S. economic data lowered hopes for imminent aggressive interest rate cuts by the Federal Reserve. The 10-year U.S. Treasury yield climbed to a peak of 4.73%, the highest since April 2024, before settling […]