Credit default swaps are storing
up trouble for China,
FT, 29 August 2017, by Joe Zhang,
Credit default swaps are a
Wall Street invention. During the crisis of 2008, they crippled a
number of significant financial companies. But where in the world
are such instruments most popular? Not in the US, despite what you
might think, but in China.
The China Financing Guarantee
Association, a quasi-governmental body that regulates the guarantee
companies (in other words, the issuers of the swaps), says it has
194 member institutions, though their ranks have thinned in recent
years. Many guarantee companies have simply not bothered to become
members of this club.
In a parallel with the
American obsession with home ownership that led to the formation of
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the federal housing finance agencies,
the Chinese government has in the past few decades done its best to
promote small and medium-sized enterprises by providing them with
credit guarantees. Tens of thousands of state-owned, private and
hybrid guarantee companies have come into being.
And just like Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac, China’s guarantee companies are all thinly
capitalised. This is due partly to the misconception that a
third-party guarantee is sufficient for SMEs to tap commercial
credit. Mispricing in China’s CDS market is severe and chronic. The
guarantee companies typically charge only 2-3 per cent to the
borrowers, but assume the full risk of their loan delinquency.
When the economy was growing fast, from the
1980s through to the early 2010s, these guarantee fees seemed like
manna from heaven — so much free money. But when the economy began
to slow from 2012 onwards, default rates rose, and many guarantee
companies disappeared. Only then did people begin to question the
business model and the pricing of guarantees. However, nobody seems
to know how to correct the problem of mispricing.
Unlike CDS in the US, credit
guarantees in China have the following deficiency: usually, they
cannot be traded. Some observers argue this is probably an
advantage for the industry because it forces deal originators to
“eat what they cook”, minimising irresponsibility and recklessness
in their origination process. It is estimated that the total size
of China’s market for such instruments is more than $500bn,
excluding the credit enhancement these guarantee companies provide
to SMEs’ bond sales and asset-backed securities. But no one knows
the size of the market for sure.
The number of guarantee
companies still operating has reduced significantly since the peak
in 2011. Today, their main mission is to unwind their long-duration
guarantees and liquidate the collaterals they have repossessed —
dubious equity stakes here and there, land or real estate. There
are some healthy operators, but they are few and far between.
Why should this story be of interest to the
Chinese public and, indeed, to outside observers? Because it is key
to understanding the strange longevity of China’s credit bubble. It
is true that the country’s credit market is far too big, but
against the doomsday scenarios some analysts have painted, it has
refused to burst because of the many non-bank financial
institutions that have served as plumbers for the banks.
China’s economic slowdown in the past five years
has decimated its microcredit sector and, to a lesser extent, the
trust companies. Their destruction has also helped shield the
commercial banks.
As one grateful commercial banker recently
remarked to me, CDS, bridge loans and wealth management products
have served as the banks’ sewage pipes. Half-jokingly, he described
the CDS issuers as “selfless and heroic”.
The writer is the chairman of China Smartpay
Group and a former manager at the People’s Bank of
China
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