As U.S. cracks down on more Chinese firms, global banks
scramble to manage risk
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[September 11, 2020] By
Sumeet Chatterjee
HONG KONG (Reuters) - The sharp expansion of U.S. actions to hobble
Chinese firms in recent weeks has sparked a rush by global lenders to
pare back exposure to the companies and to identify others that may
become caught in Washington's crosshairs, banking sources said.
Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp (SMIC) <0981.HK> became
the latest company ensnared in escalating tensions between the world's
two biggest economies, after a U.S. Defense Department official last
week said Washington could add China's biggest chipmaker to its trade
blacklist.
Soon after the news broke, bankers at a global lender which has more
than $200 million in outstanding credit with SMIC huddled to discuss if
there was a way to get the Chinese firm to prepay some of the loans.
"Issuing new credit lines or refinancing the existing debt is out of
question, but how do we minimise the risk to the existing portfolio?" a
senior banker who took part in the discussions told Reuters.
"It's bizarre ... we are spending more time in managing the risk from
these actions and preparing for more sanctions than originating new
business," he said. "You never know where and when will the axe fall
next."
The banker, who is not authorised to speak to the media and declined to
be identified, said internal discussions about SMIC's loans were ongoing
and no conclusion had been reached.
SMIC did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment on the
banker's remarks.
While bilateral tensions over trade and telecoms giant Huawei
Technologies Co Ltd [HWT.UL] have been cause for concern over the past
two years, anxiety at global banks over their Chinese portfolios has
ramped up in past months with the advent of the Hong Kong national
security law, U.S. orders for China's ByteDance to divest video app
TikTok and now SMIC.
Last month, Washington also blacklisted 24 Chinese companies and
targeted individuals it said were part of construction and military
actions in the South China Sea, its first such sanctions against Beijing
over the disputed strategic waterway.
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Lightning strikes are
seen above the skyline of Shanghai's financial district of Pudong,
China August 10, 2020. REUTER/Aly Song/File Photo
The risk of actions against more Chinese companies is only growing ahead of the
U.S election in November, bankers said, noting President Donald Trump has made
national security and his hardline stance against China a key part of his
campaign.
Two senior bankers at European lenders said they were taking stock of their
banks' exposure to Chinese technology firms.
In particular, they were looking at clients involved in hardware and
semiconductors with business interests in the United States, and were trying to
assess the risk of those firms being blacklisted.
Fresh lending to Chinese companies, already under pressure due to worries about
the business impact of the coronavirus pandemic, has also slowed.
"Last year, it used to take a few days to do due diligence and write a check to
these companies in China. Now it takes weeks," said a banker at one of the
European banks.
"The actions against the Chinese companies will be a big threat from the balance
sheet management perspective until the election."
The foreign bank with the biggest exposure to Chinese companies is HSBC Holdings
<HSBA.L>, followed by Standard Chartered <STAN.L>. HSBC is 8th in the mandated
arranger loan league table for companies whose ultimate parents are Chinese,
while StanChart ranks 11th, according to Refinitiv data.
HSBC and StanChart declined to comment.
(Reporting by Sumeet Chatterjee; Additional reporting by Josh Horwitz in
Shanghai; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)
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