Showing posts with label COSCO. Show all posts
Showing posts with label COSCO. Show all posts

Monday, February 22, 2016

State will continue to guarantee sovereign debt - Sara Hsu

Sara Hsu
Sara Hsu
China´s debts level has reached record heights, but the state will continue to guarantee sovereign debts, writes financial analyst Sara Hsu. And that support is also extended to state-owned companies like Cosco and ChemChina, despite downward pressures from the rating agencies, she argues in the Diplomat.

Sara Hsu:
Non-performing loans accumulated to 1.95 trillion RMB in 2015. As Shang Fulin, chairman of the China Banking Regulatory Commission (CBRC), stated last month, non-performing loans had increased for 17 quarters straight by the end of 2015. Now, banks are calling on the government to loosen its bad loan provisions, and the CBRC is considering this request. The big four banks are already close to the bad loan provision floor. Non-performing loans have surged to their highest level since 2009. As bank lending only loosens, concerns are rising that the level of total debt is becoming insurmountable. 
Also of concern has been the debt position of some companies purchasing assets abroad. ChemChina, a highly indebted company that has the luxury of being backed by the state, recently snapped up Syngenta, a large Swiss producer of seeds and pesticides. 
ChemChina is excessively leveraged, but it is owned by the state-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission. China Cosco Holdings, another highly indebted company, recently acquired the Greek port of Piraeus. Without state backing, these companies would barely be standing, much less acquiring assets all over the world. 
Still, the lesson of ChemChina and Cosco is that where the state is present, losses are far less likely. This is not the U.K. or Germany, in which the markets wield ultimate power, but China, in which the state rises above the rest. While China’s leveraging status is certainly of concern, it does not mean that the powerful nation will enter crisis mode, as many bears are predicting. Nonperforming loans? The government will play ball, adjusting regulations to accommodate the need for banks to prop up the flagging economy. Asset management companies may, as in the past, purchase these loans to improve banks’ balance sheets. Indebted local governments? Let them issue munis. Poorly performing real estate sector, at the expense of property developers? Loosen home-buying rules. 
For sure, the debt situation in China is serious, and the threat to China’s debt ratings is real. It is likely that ratings on corporate debt, and perhaps the rating on China’s sovereign debt, may be pushed downward in the months to come. However, investors should remember that China is ultimately a different animal. Although high leverage presents a problem for China’s debt ratings, it is unlikely to present a threat to China’s economic future. The state is present to ensure that any type of crisis scenario remains unrealistic.
More in the Diplomat.

Sara Hsu is a financial expert at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need her at your meeting and conference? Do get in touch or fill in our speakers´request form.


Are you looking for more financial experts at the China Speakers Bureau? Do check out this list.

Thursday, May 08, 2014

Rejoice: China investments are bigger than those from the US - Joel Backaler

Joel Backaler
Joel Backaler
For the first time, Chinese investments in the US were larger than US investments in China, announced the US Chamber of Commerce in April. About time, writes China consulent Joel Backaler in TealeafNation. "Americans worry that China is buying up the world. But there’s another, better way for U.S. authorities, businesses, and citizens to approach the influx: Embrace it."

Joel Backaler:
First, Chinese firms bring a great deal of cash to the table. Chinese global outward investment reached $85 billion in 2013, $14 billion of which ended up in the United States. A potent example illustrating the positive side of Chinese investment can be found in Michigan-based automotive steering firm Nexteer. During the global financial crisis, Nexteer CEO Robert Remenar targeted Chinese investors for his faltering firm. In 2010, he found a new owner in Chinese company AVIC Automotive, a state-owned firm, which bought Nexteer for $465 million. Under the new ownership, Nexteer’s CEO retained his entire management team and his decision-making authority, and was able to revitalize the company in a few short years. In December 2013, Nexteer’s president and global chief operating officer, Laurent Bresson, told local media that the firm was in “extremely rapid growth mode.” In the two years following the deal, Nexteer invested more than $220 million in its Saginaw, Michigan operations, where the firm remains headquartered today.
In addition to pumping capital into cash-strapped U.S. firms, Chinese companies can also fuel job growth and add valuable tax dollars at the state and federal levels. In November 2000, Danish shipping giant Maersk Line ended its service to the Port of Boston, jeopardizing 10,000 local jobs. By April 2001, port director Mike Leone traveled to Beijing to meet with the management team of the China Ocean Shipping (COSCO). His negotiations proved successful in March 2002 when COSCO filled the void left by Maersk and opened direct service from China to Boston, not only saving those 10,000 jobs, but also creating additional ones through a $250 million investment into an expanded container handling facility.
Chinese auto parts firm Wanxiang America has also saved thousands of jobs for the U.S. economy. By January 2013, the firm saved more than 3,000 U.S. positions through multiple acquisitions of foundering U.S. companies. Headquartered in Elgin, Illinois, Wanxiang America has become a $2.5 billion corporation since its founder, Pin Ni, started the U.S. subsidiary out of his home in 1994.
More in TealeafNation.

Joel Backaler is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need him at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch or fill in our speakers´ request form.

Earlier this week Joel Backaler published his book China Goes West: Everything You Need to Know About Chinese Companies Going Global. Are you a media representative and do you want to talk to one of our speakers? Drop us a line.
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