People
&Markets
Pledged shares
hobble China
stock market
#HINAûISûSTRUGGLINGûTOûRESTOREûCONlDENCEûINû
its stock markets, which are being weighed
down by a massive amount of shares that
have been pledged as collateral as credit-
starved companies seek to raise funds.
Analysts say the practice, which involves
10% of total outstanding shares, is a
MINElELDûFORûANûECONOMYûALREADYûBATTLINGû
slowing growth and a trade war with the
United States.
4IGHTûCREDITûMARKETSûINû#HINAûMEANû
that many companies, especially small
and medium-sized enterprises, have scarce
recourse to banks or other sources of
lNANCINGûANDûPOLICYMAKERSûHAVEûYETûTOû
promise any actual money.
Many of those companies have turned to
PLEDGINGûSHARESûTOûlNANCEûCOMPANIESûASûAû
way of raising cash.
“Using pledged shares to borrow has
become a very popular, and very important
funding tool,” said Wang Jin, a Shanghai-
based lawyer who is dealing with an
increasing number of disputes involving
collateralised loans.
About US$620bn worth of Chinese shares
currently trading on Chinese markets have
BEENûPLEDGEDûMOSTLYûBYû3-%Sû4HEûPRACTICEû
BOOMEDûINûûANDûûASû"EIJINGûSTARTEDû
weaning companies off borrowing in the
shadow banking sector.
But now, the nearly 20% slump in the
broader market this year has triggered
margin calls, forced liquidations, ownership
changes, business disruptions and bond
DEFAULTSûFORûHUNDREDSûOFûLISTEDûlRMS
Forced liquidations have a disastrous
effect on companies involved, said Wang, a
PARTNERûATû(IWAYSû,AWû&IRMûh4HEûIMPACTûTOû
the real economy would be even bigger if
THEûCONTAGIONûSPREADSûTOûAFlLIATESûANDûOTHERû
businesses along the value chain,” he said.
$URINGûTHEûMARKETûSLUMPûOFû
û
over 1,000 companies suspended share
trading to avoid margin call risks. But
regulators have now tightened rules for
share suspension, giving no buffer to listed
lRMSûFACINGûRISKSûOFûFORCEDûLIQUIDATION
HUGE FUNDING PROBLEMS
4HATûMEANSûTHEûPRIVATEûSECTORûWHICHû
drives half the economy and generates the
bulk of jobs, is going to face huge funding
problems, unless Beijing steps in with state
money.
4HEûGOVERNMENTûTHREWûMONEYûATûTHEû
PROBLEMûINûûEVENûASKINGûSTATE
OWNEDû
funds to buy shares. Now, it is asking private
sector funds to help these companies.
6ICEû0REMIERû,IUû(EûCENTRALûBANKû
GOVERNORû9Iû'ANGûASûWELLûASû#HINASû
securities, and banking and insurance
regulators, have called for private funds
to pump money into struggling listed
companies.
4HATûPUSHEDû3HANGHAIûSTOCKSûUPûû
on October 19 and 4.1% last Monday. By
Wednesday, however, markets moved
lower as investor worries returned.
ASSET MANAGEMENT SCHEME
4HEûMOSTûCONCRETEûMEASUREûANNOUNCEDû
so far to address market fears has been an
asset management scheme unveiled last
Monday by an industry association that
TARGETSûSTRUGGLINGûLISTEDûlRMSû"UTûTHEû
INITIALû2MBBNû53BN ûCOMMITMENTû
from 11 brokerages pales in comparison
to the nearly Rmb3trn worth of pledged
shares that some estimate face margin calls.
h4HEREûARENTûCONCRETEûPOLICYûMEASURESû
being rolled out, and no new money is
promised,” said Hong Hao, chief strategist
at BoCom International.
4HEûWIDESPREADûPRACTICEûOFûBORROWINGû
against share holdings has led to shares
OFûûOUTûOFûûCOMPANIESûLISTEDûONû
China’s start-up ChiNext board being
pledged for loans. By mid-2018, 16% of
Chinese domestic A-shares were pledged on
AVERAGEûCOMPAREDûWITHûûINûMID
û
according to Evergrande Research Institute.
Many analysts suspect that government
rhetoric will only delay, but not defuse, the
implosion of the massive “pledged shares”
MINElELDûAMONGûSMALLERûCOMPANIESûnûONEû
of the biggest woes plaguing China’s stock
market.
h2ISKûIS ûUNDERûCONTROLûWITHûTHEû
exception of some small-to-mid caps,”
WROTEû'AOû4INGûHEADûOFû#HINAûSTRATEGYûATû
UBS Securities last Monday.
Who’s moving where...
FITCH (CHINA) BOHUA
CREDIT RATINGS, the
newly created China
domestic rating
agency of Fitch, has
appointed Danny
Chen as its chief
executive.
Chen’s previous
positions include
chief executive of
Qingdao Conson
Financial Holdings, a
state-owned financial
holding company in
Qingdao, and chief
credit officer and chief
rating officer at China
Lianhe.
Fitch previously
held a 49% stake
in Lianhe before
selling its shares
to Singaporean
sovereign wealth fund
GIC earlier this year.
Qing Liao, until
recently a senior
director with S&P
in Beijing, has
been appointed an
independent director
at BANK OF CHINA.
Liao, who spent
13 years with S&P
covering China’s
banks, left the rating
agency in June.
He previously
worked for two
years at the China
Banking Regulatory
Commission and also
spent just over four
years at the People’s
Bank of China.
Many analysts suspect that government rhetoric will only delay,
but not defuse, the implosion of the massive “pledged shares”
minefield among smaller companies – one of the biggest woes
plaguing China’s stock market.