Zhongrong International Trust Company headquarters in Beijing (Photo: Reuters).
According to Reuters , Zhongzhi Enterprise Group (ZEG), a large asset management company in China and heavily involved in the real estate sector, informed investors on November 22 that it was "severely lacking liquidity".
In a letter to investors, ZEG said the company is saddled with debts of up to 460 billion yuan ($65 billion), while its current assets are only 200 billion yuan.
"Because the group's assets are concentrated in debt and equity investments and have long maturities, recovery is difficult, the expected recoverable amount is low, liquidity is exhausted and assets are severely impaired," ZEG explained.
ZEG is one of China’s largest private conglomerates with interests in financial services, mining and electric vehicles. Financial concerns first surfaced in August when Zhongrong International Trust, a trust in which ZEG partly owns, said it had failed to pay corporate investors.
As of the end of 2022, Zhongrong International Trust managed $87 billion in assets for corporate and wealthy individuals. Zhongrong International Trust was once one of thousands of asset management companies that brought relatively high returns to investors.
Analysts estimate that China’s trust fund, or shadow banking, industry is worth about $2.9 trillion, larger than the size of France’s economy. Shadow banks typically provide financing through off-balance sheet operations or through non-bank financial institutions, such as trust companies.
Unlike the banking system, shadow banking financial institutions can lend money more easily, but those loans are not secured like traditional bank loans. This leads to the risk of a systemic collapse when there is a sudden, widespread demand for payments.
Investors in these wealth management products in China are mainly middle- and upper-class, experts say, and any defaults or even concerns about delayed payments could undermine consumer confidence.
In recent years, the Chinese government has sought to curb the rapid growth of such non-bank debt.
In particular, the shadow banking sector has come under scrutiny amid concerns about the future of the world's second-largest economy amid the property crisis.
According to data from Nomura bank, as of the end of March this year, about 7.4% of the total value of trust funds in China were real estate loans, equivalent to about 1.13 trillion yuan (more than 159 billion USD).
Nomura believes that the actual debt of real estate enterprises borrowed from trust funds could be three times larger than this figure, reaching 3.8 trillion yuan by the end of June.
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