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Chinese investors avoided a high-profile trust default on Monday, easing worries that the economy may be about to tip the first domino of shadow banking defaults. [Photo/icpress.cn] |
BEIJING - Chinese investors avoided a high-profile trust default on Monday, easing worries that the economy may be about to tip the first domino of shadow banking defaults.
China Credit Trust reached a last-minute deal with investors to repay their investment in the three-billion-yuan ($500 million)product, deflating concerns that default would pound investor confidence in shadow banking and trigger credit crunches.
"This offer comes as a compromise given rising concerns over a full default, but it is likely that investors have become more cautious on trust products in general," said Zhang Zhiwei, chief China economist at Nomura.
The trust product, launched in February 2011, attracted some 700 private bank clients of the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China to invest in a private coal miner in North China's Shanxi province. Shanxi Zhengfu Energy Group went bankrupt last year, unable to repay the loans it secured through the trust product.
Investors retrieved their principal after agreeing to a return of 2.8 percent on the product in the third year, according to documents seen by Xinhua reporters. The annual returns in the first two years were 9.5 percent and 10 percent respectively.
The incident alarmed a market already nervous that China's ongoing financial liberalization will mean millions of people pulling their money out of savings accounts and buying alternative financial products that yield interest more than double that on bank deposits.
While investors have dodged default this time, there may be more bad news from the shadow banking sector.
"Similar incidents will occur more often in 2014," said Ding Shuang, senior China economist at Citibank. "The regulators have become more tolerant of partial defaults as they intend to rein in the shadow banking and raise investors' awareness of risks."