Asia credit investors feel the pain of China property exposure
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[July 28, 2022] By
Xie Yu
HONG KONG (Reuters) - China's crisis-hit
property sector has driven underperformance this year in some
Asia-focused credit funds, including one led by a former Lehman Brothers
portfolio manager, pummelling their returns and bringing years of gains
to a juddering halt.
Hong Kong-based L&R Capital's Asia Credit Alpha Fund, a hedge fund with
more than half of its geographical exposure focused on China, slumped by
18.9% in 2022 as of end-May, according to documents seen by Reuters and
a person familiar with the matter.
The fund, led by former Lehman Brothers portfolio manager Li Ran,
retreated another 4% in June. The downbeat performance looks set to end
the fund's four-year winning streak since inception, showed the
documents.
Its losses were partly a result of its exposure to Chinese property
developers as sector-wide pain engulfed even companies with stronger
credit profiles, according to the person.
The fund's exposure to the overall property industry shrank to 22% by
the end of May from 33% at the beginning of this year, the documents
show.
L&R's performance rout shows how even seasoned investment managers are
struggling to navigate China's devastating property sector crisis.
China's property sector, a key pillar of the world's second-largest
economy, has lurched from one crisis to another and has been a major
drag on economic growth over the past year. It has seen a string of
defaults by debt-squeezed developers.
Prudence Investment Management, a Hong Kong-based hedge fund
specialising in China-related credit investments, saw its flagship fund
drop 2.5% by end-June, a performance described as "decent" by peers,
according to a separate person familiar with the matter and documents
reviewed by Reuters.
The fund managed to pare some losses after March as it turned more
neutral on the property sector and diversified to other areas, according
to the person.
L&R Capital did not respond to queries. Prudence declined to comment.
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Under-construction apartments are pictured from a building during
sunset in the Shekou area of Shenzhen, Guangdong province, China
November 7, 2021. Picture taken November 7, 2021. REUTERS/David
Kirton
All the sources declined to be named as they were not authorised to speak to the
media.
Kenny Chung, portfolio manager of Astera Capital Partners, which manages a Hong
Kong based fixed-income hedge fund, said he hasn't seen "a more challenging
investment environment for at least 10 years".
The fund managed to return 4.2% by June, mainly benefiting from net shorting
China property developers early in the year and diversification to other regions
later.
The damage in the mutual funds space has been just as severe.
The biggest 10 Asian high-yield mutual funds have posted hefty losses, all above
25% by the end of June, partly hit by their exposure to Chinese property
developers, data compiled by Morningstar showed.
The Fidelity Asian High Yield Fund saw its size shrink by 40% this year to $2.4
billion at end-June, as its returns crumbled by 34.2% in the first six months.
Its China exposure stood at around 31.2% by the end of June, compared to 37.9%
at end-December, the data showed.
Fidelity did not respond to queries.
"Before the crash of the Chinese property developers, all of these Asian high
yield funds were very heavily invested in the sector…those trimmed their China
exposure earlier this year have fared better," said Patrick Ge, senior analyst
with Morningstar.
(Reporting by Xie Yu; Editng by Sumeet Chatterjee and Muralikumar Anantharaman)
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