Worthy Insights / Opinion Pieces / Advice
WSJ – The Cushion That Saved Taxpayers From Banco Popular’s Failure – Paul Davies 6/7
- “Regulators can make a determination that a bank is failing or likely to fail with information that investors don’t have. Regulators shouldn’t act too early, but it is right that they should act when waiting threatens the integrity of the financial system or a drawdown of public money. Any investor who doesn’t understand that should steer clear of bank equity and debt. Period.”
The Big Picture: Bloomberg – Jim Chanos on Tesla, China 6/7
- Interview
Real Estate
WSJ – Daily Shot: Green Street Commercial Property Index 6/9
FT – Real estate: The global luxury condo glut – Anna Dedhar 6/8
- Podcast
Energy
WSJ – Daily Shot: EIA – Total US Effective Rig Count 6/9
China
FT – LeEco’s listed arm cancels bond fundraising – Emily Feng 6/8
- “A bond sale (meant to raise Rmb2bn – $300m) by the Shenzhen-listed arm of embattled company LeEco has been cancelled, after the group was asked to address regulators’ concerns about the health of its financials.”
WSJ – Beijing Lands in Another Debt Mess – Anjani Trivedi 6/9
WSJ – Perpetual Doesn’t Mean Forever in China – Jacky Wong 6/8
- “Chinese companies growing appetite tapping an unconventional source of financing might not be a source of eternal bliss.”
- “Perpetual securities, bondlike instruments that pay interest but have no maturity dates, have become popular in China in recent years: Issuance jumped to $55 billion in 2016 from less than $1 billion in 2012, according to Dealogic. This year, Chinese companies have been keener to issue them in offshore markets, raising some $4.4 billion, more than their dollar-denominated issuance in all of 2016.”
- “A big reason Chinese companies like perpetuals is that they are classified as equity on their balance sheets. The accounting logic is that perpetual issuers don’t ever have to repay the bond’s principal and can choose to defer annual coupon payments—making them similar to dividends.”
- “Treating perpetuals as equity means companies can report lower gearing ratios, a measure investors commonly use to assess a company’s indebtedness. China Evergrande, the country’s biggest property developer by assets, had a net debt-to-equity ratio of 120% as of December. That ratio would have jumped to 432% if its perpetual bonds had been counted as debt. Investors are happy to play along as the perpetuals usually pay higher yields. Evergrande effectively paid an 11% coupon on its perpetuals last year.”
- “But whatever the accounting rules say, perpetual securities still work much more like debt than equity in China. To start with, companies can defer coupon payments on perpetuals only if they aren’t paying dividends to their shareholders. Given that Chinese companies often have a majority shareholder, and therefore nearly always pay a dividend, that clause rarely applies.”
- “Moreover, perpetuals in China often include a clause that automatically steps up the coupon rate, usually after three to five years. Since the step-up is usually quite steep, issuers have a strong incentive to redeem their perpetuals early—making them not so perpetual, after all. The coupon on a recent $500 million perpetual bond issue from state-owned Power Construction Corp. of China will jump by 5 percentage points, more than double its initial yield, after five years.”
- “Investors hoping to live happily ever after with perpetuals ought to scrutinize why companies are issuing such disguised debt in the first place—and whether it is really in their interests.”
FT – Chinese regulators target staff shareholding plans – Gabriel Wildau and Nan Ma 6/9
- “The Shenzhen Stock Exchange is querying listed companies about a series of unusual plans to sell shares to employees while insuring them against losses if stock prices fall.”
- “At least 21 Shenzhen-listed companies announced employee shareholding plans in the first week of June that include guarantees by the chairman or senior executives to protect workers against downside risk, according to exchange filings compiled from Wind Information.”
- “While it is not yet clear whether such plans will enable large shareholders to sell directly to employees, market observers still view them as a response to the tighter rules. With stake sales more difficult to execute, large shareholders are looking for ways to boost their share prices, at least until they can find ways to offload their shares.”
NYT – China’s New Bridges: Rising High, but Buried in Debt – Chris Buckley 6/10
Middle East
FT – Crisis in the Gulf: Qatar faces a stress test – Simeon Kerr 6/9
South America
WSJ – Daily Shot: Caracas Stock Exchange 6/9
- “Venezuela’s stock market has gone ‘vertical’ as it becomes the only legal ‘safe-haven’ to escape the currency collapse.”
- “Reports of a failure to pay a debt to Russia and a requested ruling on whether such a failure constitutes a ‘credit event’ that could trigger insurance contracts on billions of dollars of international bonds have brought Venezuela closer than ever to the brink of financial collapse.”
- “Matters may soon come to a head. On Wednesday, the International Swaps and Derivatives Association, an umbrella organization of the finance industry’s biggest banks and money managers, was asked by an anonymous member whether the reported default to Russia should be classified as a ‘credit event’ and trigger insurance-like contracts on Venezuela’s roughly $36bn in sovereign bonds.”
- “The ISDA ruling may take some time. And even if it decides a credit event has occurred, there would be no automatic default on Venezuela’s sovereign bonds.”
- “But it is clear from the terms of those bonds that should the government fail to meet any other debt obligations, bondholders can demand immediate payment.”
- “Should the sovereign bonds then go into default, the roughly $35bn of outstanding PDVSA bonds would not be affected, and may even be left intact. The government in Caracas almost certainly would not.”