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January 21, 2014 – CHINA - On
Friday, Chinese state media reported that China Credit Trust Co. warned
investors that they may not be repaid when one of its wealth management
products matures on January 31, the first day of the Year of the Horse.
The Industrial and Commercial Bank of China sold the China Credit Trust
product to its customers in inland Shanxi province. This bank, the
world’s largest by assets, on Thursday suggested it will not compensate
investors, stating in a phone interview with Reuters that “a situation
completely does not exist in which ICBC will assume the main
responsibility.” There should be no mystery why this investment, known
as “2010 China Credit-Credit Equals Gold #1 Collective Trust Product,”
is on the verge of default. China Credit Trust loaned the proceeds from
sales of the 3.03 billion-yuan ($496.2 million) product to unlisted
Shanxi Zhenfu Energy Group, a coal miner. The coal company probably is
paying something like 12 percent for the money because Credit Equals
Gold promised a 10% annual return to investors—more than three times
current bank deposit rates—and China Credit Trust undoubtedly took a
hefty cut of the interest. Zhenfu was undoubtedly desperate for money.
One of its vice chairmen was arrested in May 2012 for taking deposits
without a banking license, undoubtedly trying to raise funds through
unconventional channels. In any event, the company was permitted to
borrow long after it should have been stopped—reports indicate that it
had accumulated 5.9 billion yuan in obligations. Zhenfu, according to
one Chinese newspaper account, has already been declared bankrupt with
assets of less than 500 million yuan.
The Credit Equals Gold product
is not the first troubled WMP, as these investments are known, to risk
nonpayment, but Chinese officials have always managed to make investors
whole. CITIC Trust did that in 2013 on a steel-loan product in Hubei
province, and a mysterious third-party guarantee rescued a Hua Xia Bank
WMP. An investment marketed by ICBC’s Suzhou branch was similarly
repaid. There has never been a default—other than one of timing—of a
WMP, so the Credit Equals Gold product could be the first. If it is, it
will edge out the WMP that invested in loans to Liansheng Resources
Group, another Shanxi coal miner. Jilin Trust packaged Liansheng’s loans
into a wealth management product sold by China Construction Bank , the
country’s second-largest lender by assets, to its customers. Liansheng
is in bankruptcy, and it looks like the WMP holders will not be repaid
in full. A WMP default, whether relating to Liansheng or Zhenfu, could
devastate the Chinese banking system and the larger economy as well. In
short, China’s growth since the end of 2008 has been dependent on
ultra-loose credit first channeled through state banks, like ICBC and
Construction Bank, and then through the WMPs, which permitted the state
banks to avoid credit risk. Any disruption in the flow of cash from
investors to dodgy borrowers through WMPs would rock China with sky-high
interest rates or a precipitous plunge in credit, probably both. The
result? The best outcome would be decades of misery, what we saw in
Japan after its bubble burst in the early 1990s. –Forbes
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