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Strategies & Market Trends : HONG KONG -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Tom who wrote (2499)10/27/1998 9:07:00 AM
From: WONG  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2951
 
GITIC defaults on debt
Chinese provincial investment trust fails to make payment on $200M bond

October 27, 1998: 8:13 a.m. ET

NEW YORK (CNNfn) - Faltering Chinese state investment firm Guangdong International Trust and Investment Corp. (GITIC) has defaulted on its corporate debt payments, Hong Kong bankers said Tuesday.
A $8.75 million semi-annual coupon payment on GITIC's $200 million 20-year bond issue had been scheduled for the close of Monday business in New York. However, no payment had been received, the bankers said.
On Oct. 6, the People's Bank of China had closed the investment trust -- a financial arm of the Chinese province of Guangdong -- because of perceptions that the firm no longer was able to maintain its estimated $1.38 billion debt.
The Monday coupon was the firm's first scheduled debt obligation since the closure.
Although GITIC's debt theoretically is backed by the provincial government, it is more likely that the Bank of China will take over the firm's outstanding obligations.
The Chinese central bank has asked investors to report their exposure to GITIC. Until the reporting period ends Jan. 6, the firm's accounts have been frozen and no debts will be paid.
The primary domestic trading partner with neighboring Hong Kong, Guangdong has been more vulnerable to Hong Kong's recent financial tumult than any other mainland region of China.
GITIC reportedly suffered massive losses from the collapse of the speculative Hong Kong real estate market, causing its now-dissolved GITIC Enterprises unit, one of the first "red chip" or mainland Chinese stocks listed on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, to enter liquidation earlier this month.
Credit rating agency Standard & Poor's lowered its rating of GITIC Enterprises debt to CCC+ or "vulnerable to nonpayment" from BB last week.
On Oct. 13, the agency had rated GITIC itself CC, or "highly vulnerable to nonpayment," the lowest rating above bankruptcy.




To: Tom who wrote (2499)10/27/1998 9:11:00 AM
From: Ron Bower  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2951
 
Tom,

"Suffices to say that those nations who are incapable of providing higher living standards, for whatever reasons, will either remain the boom-bust puppets we know or sink into societal and economic oblivion. I suspect the latter will be their fate."

That is a depressing statement. I just wish the IMF and others would get it thru their heads that it's JOBS that are needed, not bank bailouts. Target the monies to roads, bridges, dams, water & sewage treatment, schools, telecommunications. We're dealing with uneducated workforces with limited capabilities. Trying to support countries from the top is not the answer. China seems to be the only country that realizes this.

The only thing that surprises me is Zhu talking to the developers. Tung has been getting a lot of flack lately and I'm not sure why. Zhu showing support makes sense, but I'm not sure I like him being involved in HK affairs.

Why a new trading board in HK for China shares? It might be better on the Hang Seng with the more open disclosure requirements. I agree, if it's going to be a China board, put it in Shanghai - or Beijing.

JMHO,
Ron