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Alarmed by Evergrande, China's lenders hold back on new credit for property developers - Reuters

SHANGHAI/BEIJING (Reuters) - As fears of contagion from any default by China Evergrande Group mounted this month, some Chinese banks, insurers, and shadow banks stopped offering new credit to property developers, and ran urgent checks on their exposure to the troubled sector.

FILE PHOTO: A peeling logo of the Evergrande Oasis, a housing complex developed by Evergrande Group, is seen outside the construction site where the residential buildings stand unfinished, in Luoyang, China September 16, 2021. Picture taken September 16, 2021. REUTERS/Carlos Garcia Rawlins/File Photo

Carrying $305 billion in liabilities, China’s second biggest property developer inched closer to a potential default on Friday by missing the deadline on an interest payment.

Evergrande’s problems will pile pressure on peers to access funding, and analysts have warned that if property developers are unable to pay investors, suppliers and lenders China’s financial system could go into shock.

“The market is worried that real estate companies have a high concentration of cashflow problems, which would trigger large-scale bad debt risks in the banking system,” said Wang Yifeng, analyst from Everbright Securities Co.

Bank of China, the country’s fourth largest lender by assets, is monitoring closely all its developer clients, to prevent contagion risks, said a person with knowledge of the matter.

“The expectation is that not only Evergrande, but also some of the top leveraged developers are on edge of liquidity crash even insolvency,” said a person at the Bank of Shanghai Co Ltd.

To calm the market and in an unusual move, Chinese lenders including China Minsheng Bank, China Zheshang Bank and China Everbright Bank have been publicly reassuring and voluntarily disclosing their exposure to Evergrande and the property sector.

But internally, financiers are scrambling to reduce their exposure to “non-quality property assets”, bracing for a sharp deterioration in the financial health of some developers.

CREDIT STRESS

Alarmed by what has happened to Evergrande, bankers at one Shanghai branch of China CITIC Bank Corp started scrutinizing loans to developers, reviewing their accounts and repayment terms, said a person with direct knowledge.

CITIC Bank said it was fully prepared for the possible risks raised by Evergrande, had increased loan loss provisions and risk resistance.

Once China’s top-selling developer, Evergrande now looms as a seismic bust as a crackdown on debt ends a freewheeling era of building with borrowed money which became infamous for ghost cities.

Having taken the precaution of tightening credit for Evergrande a few years ago, Huarong Asset Management Co has in the past couple of weeks tightened the approval process for other developers, making it harder for them to raise money for projects in lower tier cities.

“Now, fourth-tier cities are completely out, third-tier cities are very difficult to get approvals for. So it’s tighter than it was before,” said an official at Huarong.

To reduce its overall lending to the sector, AEON Life, China’s fifth largest insurer, has raised the bar for private developers’ to obtain funds, according to an official there, which can be done, for example, by setting a higher collateral to loan rate.

Huarong AMC, AEON Life did not immediately respond to Reuters’ requests for comment.

Chinese banks, insurers and bond funds have provided large scale funding to the property sector in recent years, and their exposure is among the more significant risks facing the financial system, Scope research said on Thursday.

Property loans accounted for nearly 30% of total outstanding loans of Chinese financial institutions at the end of September 2020, as per data from the People’s Bank of China.

Fitch Ratings said in a report on Friday that many of the smaller mid-tier Chinese banks are expected to face “greater asset-quality headwinds” as the property sector suffers an increase in the credit stresses that were highlighted by Evergrande.

Reporting by Engen Tham in Shanghai and Cheng Leng in Beijing; Editing by Sumeet Chatterjee & Simon Cameron-Moore

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