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			 China has a heavy corporate debt burden and its economy is slowing, 
			putting borrowers under strain, but many lenders take comfort from 
			the fact that their loans are insured against default through the 
			nation's almost 8,000 guarantee companies. 
			 
			A third of these are state-backed companies that stand behind more 
			than 60 percent of China's guaranteed loans. They exist to 
			facilitate finance for smaller businesses - China's job-creators - 
			but a crisis unfolding in northern Hebei province shows that their 
			ability to meet those guarantees is in doubt. 
			 
			In Hebei, a gritty region of steel mills and factories close to the 
			capital Beijing, one such company is technically insolvent, a fate 
			likely shared by other guarantee firms as the world's second-largest 
			economy rapidly loses momentum. 
			 
			Hebei Financing Investment Guarantee Group has sold too many 
			guarantees, too cheaply, on loans that have now gone sour. 
			
			  
			 
			"The domestic financing guarantee model is a very bad one," said 
			Hebei Financing general manager Ma Guobin. 
			Companies such as Hebei Financing are obliged to sell guarantees to 
			borrowers at low rates of interest to underpin finance for smaller 
			businesses, which can struggle to obtain funds at viable interest 
			rates without a guarantee. 
			 
			"The industry is also immature and has many problems and 
			shortcomings. On many things we don't have a choice," Ma added. 
			 
			Hebei Financing has guaranteed loans to more than 1,000 borrowers, 
			including manufacturers that are bearing the brunt of the slowdown. 
			 
			Many of these borrowers are in danger of default, presenting Hebei 
			Financial with the prospect of having to pay out 32 billion yuan ($5 
			billion) in loan guarantees, which would wipe out its registered 
			capital of 4.2 billion yuan. 
			 
			Given the company is unable to meet all its guarantees, lenders face 
			large losses unless they can persuade the Hebei government to 
			intervene and bail them out. 
			 
			Eleven of them recently petitioned the provincial government to 
			stand behind Hebei Financing's guarantees, and the government has 
			formed a special committee to try and resolve the crisis. 
			  
			 
			"If there weren't guarantees provided by Hebei Financing Investment 
			Guarantee Group, investors would not have agreed to lend to those 
			companies," the petitioners wrote in a letter to the province's 
			Communist Party secretary and the governor. 
			The letter, reviewed by Reuters, was written by 10 trust firms and 
			one fund manager, which raised funds from the public before 
			on-lending them. If the guarantees are not honored, they may default 
			in turn on returns pledged to their own investors. 
			 
			To ratchet up the pressure on the Hebei government, the letter urged 
			it to act in order to "prevent the crisis from triggering a public 
			panic". 
			 
			Attempts to contact the Hebei government were unsuccessful. The 
			Hebei State-Owned Assets Supervisions and Administration Commission, 
			which oversees Hebei Financing, declined to comment. 
			
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			TIP OF AN ICEBERG? 
			 
			"We see a lot of these companies in China, and we worry about the 
			underlying fundamentals," said Sally Yim, senior credit officer with 
			Moody's Investors Service in Hong Kong. 
			 
			"You are bound to see more of these defaults, or troubles from these 
			type of small guarantee companies," she added. 
			 
			Yim doubted this would pose a major risk to the financial system. 
			China has $3.65 trillion in foreign reserves and could deal 
			comfortably with several crises on the scale of Hebei. 
			 
			However, a loss of investor confidence in the overall guarantee 
			industry could be harder to contain. 
			 
			If lenders suspect local governments will not bail out guarantee 
			companies in times of trouble, the broader economy becomes the loser 
			as businesses are starved of finance. 
			"This is unbelievable," said an executive of a trust company that 
			was one of the signatories to the petition. She declined to be 
			identified because of the sensitivity of the matter. 
			 
			"Who would dare to believe in the guarantee industry in the future? 
			What's the point of having this industry?" she added. 
			
			  
			Beijing is moving to strengthen the system and unveiled plans last 
			month to set up a national financial guarantee fund to back 
			provincial guarantee firms such as Hebei Financing. 
			  
			But it risks reinforcing the assumption among lenders that 
			governments will bail them out and encouraging reckless lending. 
			 
			Hebei Financing's Ma said his firm carried out due diligence and 
			required borrowers to provide collateral, but it was not allowed to 
			price its guarantees according to the level of risk. 
			 
			The lenders, however, can charge higher rates even though the risk 
			of default rests primarily with the guarantor, he said. 
			 
			"This is unfair. Very unfair. But we can’t do anything." 
			 
			Related graphic link: http://reut.rs/1NIQZT8 
			 
			(Editing by Mark Bendeich) 
			[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
				reserved.] Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. 
			
			
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