Monday, August 22, 2016

Local authorities may fund Chinese steel bailout

Online economic website Caixin has reported that embattled state owned Bohai Steel Group may be the beneficiary of a local government fund initiative which would allow the company to restructure its debt obligations, which total nearly $30 billion.

The company, which came about through the merger of four smaller firms in 2010, owes over a hundred creditors debt and have only just enough assets to cover it.

The plan is to set up a local asset management company in Tianjin, which can handle the debts. The new firm will also assist other indebted companies in the region.

“The debt restructuring is probably the biggest we’ve seen in China since the 2008 economic meltdown. It’s a big effort by the authorities to clear the heavy governmental slate,” said Michael Lane, Global Co-Head of the Investment Management Division at Shizuoka Capital Wealth Management who is advising the Tianjin government on the plan.

Most of the creditors involved are Beijing-based banks and trust firms, the magazine reported.
China has been attempting to keep in check an increasing state sector debt level for many years.

The main strategy has been to encourage creditors to accept debt-for-equity swap deals through newly formed specialist debt management firms such as China Reform Holdings Co., which is spearheading the debt re-shuffling of many state-owned companies.

The government have accelerated the debt repayment plans for the steel sector in particular as the flagging real estate market causes a decline in the demand for basic construction materials.