China To Nullify Financing Guarantees By Local Governments

Posted By on March 7, 2010

Does that make them (you know the old saying)…. indian traders?   This doesn’t sound good, to say the least!   It will also likely effect aspects of world markets in commodities, real estate and stock markets because they’ve been a large part of world growth.     China plans to nullify all guarantees local governments have provided for loans taken by their financing vehicles as concerns about credit risks on such debt surges. A crackdown on local- government borrowing, estimated at about 24 trillion yuan ($3.5 trillion) by Northwestern University Professor Victor Shih, could trigger a gigantic wave of bad loans as projects are left without funding, Shih said this month. Beijing’s fiscal situation probably isn’t as good as it looks at first glance, said Brian Jackson, an emerging markets strategist at Royal Bank of Canada in Hong Kong. Perhaps at some stage the central government is going to have to bail out the banks or the regional governments and take it on its own balance sheet
 
  
China to Nullify Financing Guarantees by Local Governments

By Bloomberg News

 

March 8 (Bloomberg) — China plans to nullify all guarantees local governments have provided for loans taken by their financing vehicles as concerns about credit risks on such debt surges.

The Ministry of Financewill also ban all future guarantees by local governments and legislatures in rules that may be issued as soon as this month, Yan Qingmin, head of the banking regulator’s Shanghai branch, said in an interview. The ministry held meetings on the rules on Feb. 25 with regulators including the China Banking Regulatory Commission and the People?s Bank of China, Yan said March 5.

China’s local governments are raising funds through investment vehicles to circumvent regulations that prevent them from borrowing directly. A crackdown on local- government borrowing, estimated at about 24 trillion yuan ($3.5 trillion) by Northwestern University Professor Victor Shih, could trigger a gigantic wave of bad loans as projects are left without funding, Shih said this month.

“Beijing’s fiscal situationprobably isn’t as good as it looks at first glance, said Brian Jackson, an emerging markets strategist at Royal Bank of Canada in Hong Kong. Perhaps at some stage the central government is going to have to bail out the banks or the regional governments and take it on its own balance sheet.

Central bank governor Zhou Xiaochuan said March 6 during the National People’s Congress that while many local financing vehicles have the ability to repay, two types cause concern. One uses land as collateral, while the other can’t fully repay borrowing, meaning that the local governments may be liable, leading to fiscal risks.

Premier Wen Jiabao, at the opening of the annual parliamentary meetings last week, said the central government would sell 200 billion yuan of bonds for a second year to help local governments fund infrastructure projects. Wen also warned of latent risks in China’s banking system as he pledged to continue a moderately loose monetary policy and a proactive fiscal stance.

The parliamentary meetings will end March 14 with Premier Wen’s annual press conference in Beijing.

A few cities and counties may face very large repayment pressure in coming years because of debt ratios already exceeding 400 percent, a person with knowledge of the matter said in January. The ratio is of year-end outstanding debt to annual disposable fiscal income.

The financing vehicles of large coastal cities are well-funded as most have publicly traded subsidiaries that can raise capital from the marketsand rely less on bank loans. Entities in northern and western China are of particular concern, the banking regulator’s Yan said while attending the parliamentary meetings.

The 1998 collapse of Guangdong International Trust & Investment Corp., which borrowed domestically and overseas on behalf of southern China’s Guangdong province, left creditors including Dresdner Bank AG of Germany and Bank One Corp. in the U.S. with $3 billion of unpaid bonds. It marked the first time that Chinese authorities failed to bail out one of the nation’s state-owned trusts.

Commercial bankshave already been told to assess their exposure to such lending and stop providing further credit if problems are found, Yan said.

China’s banks doled out a combined 9.59 trillion yuan in new loans last year, helping the government engineer a turnaround in the world’s third-largest economy. The credit binge sparked concern about more bad loans and asset bubbles.

Northwestern’s Shih estimated that borrowing by China’s 8,000 local-government entities may have totaled 11.429 trillion yuan in outstanding debt by the end of last year and they had credit lines with banks for an additional 12.767 trillion yuan. That may result in bad loans of up to 3 trillion yuan.

China’s banks had 497 billion yuan of non-performing loans as of Dec. 31, accounting for 1.58 percent the nation’s total advances, according to the banking regulator.

Luo Jun, Kevin Hamlin. With assistance from Zhang Dingmin in Beijing. Editors: John Liu, Richard Dobson.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aIcTfdm5rWdY&pos=2

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