HSBC, StanChart May Face Secondary Shockwaves From Evergrande Crisis: Analysts

HSBC, StanChart May Face Secondary Shockwaves From Evergrande Crisis: Analysts
A peeling logo of the Evergrande Oasis, a housing complex developed by Evergrande Group, is seen outside the construction site where the residential buildings stand unfinished, in Luoyang, China on Sept. 16, 2021. Carlos Garcia Rawlins/Reuters
Reuters
Updated:

LONDON—HSBC and Standard Chartered could face spillover damage to their profits and balance sheets from the debt crisis enveloping China Evergrande Group even though the two banks say they have limited their direct exposure, analysts have warned.

Other banks and insurers could also suffer indirect effects such as loss of fees or a devaluation of their investments.

HSBC and StanChart make a big chunk of their profits in China and Hong Kong and they have been the foreign banks most involved in underwriting syndicated loans for developers there. That means they are likely to face the most immediate second-order impacts, analysts at JPMorgan said in a research report.

HSBC and Standard Chartered both declined to comment on the report.

Evergrande has left global investors guessing over whether it will make a key interest payment, adding to fears of big losses for bondholders and sending tremors through China’s property sector and economy.

Hong Kong and mainland China accounted for around 84 percent of HSBC’s profits in 2020 while China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, and North Asia contributed 81 percent of StanChart’s profits last year, according to a Reuters analysis of filings by the two companies—underscoring the region’s importance to their overall businesses.

The two have the most direct lending exposure among foreign banks to China’s property sector—$17 billion or 1.5 percent of group assets for HSBC and $1.3 billion or 0.5 percent of group loans at StanChart, according to JPMorgan.

Pedestrians walking past the logo for HSBC in Hong Kong on Sept. 21, 2020. (Isaac Lawrence/AFP via Getty Images)
Pedestrians walking past the logo for HSBC in Hong Kong on Sept. 21, 2020. Isaac Lawrence/AFP via Getty Images

The property sector contributes 14 percent of China’s GDP or 25 percent if indirect contributions are included, JPMorgan said, and property loans are worth some 6.6 percent of total loans, meaning a hit to the sector could have significant wider economic impacts.

HSBC and Standard Chartered have both said they have no direct exposure to Evergrande, and that they have taken steps in recent years to carefully manage their exposures to any one sector.

HSBC has already sold all positions in its China bond or Asia credit portfolios with exposure to Evergrande, a source at the bank said.

Citing Dealogic data, JPMorgan said HSBC has been involved in underwriting 39 outstanding syndicated loans for Chinese developers while StanChart has worked on 18 such deals, which could come under pressure if there are wider property sector defaults.

In a syndicated loan banks typically underwrite the deal and then sell the debt to other investors, but may keep some of the exposure on their books.

“There is a risk that this is not an idiosyncratic event but an industry-wide problem which could result in significant spillover damage,” JPMorgan said.

The U.S. bank said it estimates there could be a further 11 defaults worth some $30 billion this year across the Chinese high-yield property sector, amounting to a 23 percent default rate.

Market Chill

Other European financial firms also face a negative impact on business lines such as capital markets, asset management and private banking, said Dierk Brandenburg, head of financial institutions at ratings agency Scope.
A man walks in front of unfinished residential buildings at the Evergrande Oasis, a housing complex developed by Evergrande Group, in Luoyang, China on Sept. 15, 2021. (Carlos Garcia Rawlins/Reuters)
A man walks in front of unfinished residential buildings at the Evergrande Oasis, a housing complex developed by Evergrande Group, in Luoyang, China on Sept. 15, 2021. Carlos Garcia Rawlins/Reuters

“These will impact the profit and loss figures of Europe’s globally active banks in the coming quarters, as could the ensuing regulatory crackdown by Chinese authorities,” he said.

Chinese real-estate companies have tapped the public U.S. dollar bond market for $274 billion in the past five years, Scope analysts said, citing Bond Radar data, suggesting foreign banks could lose out on fees if such deals dwindle.

Insurers’ investment portfolios could also be affected, said Volker Kudszus, Sector Lead for EMEA Insurance at S&P Global Ratings.

“We are not concerned by direct exposure of European insurers to Evergrande, but indirect exposure, e.g. through investments in the Chinese equity or real estate market, might see some volatility,” Kudszus said.

Insurers Prudential, Ageas, and Swiss Re were likely to have the most exposure to Chinese real estate, Morningstar analysts said this week.

Ageas said its Chinese joint venture company had no direct exposure to Evergrande but around 2 percent of the corporate bond portfolio was invested in highly-rated Chinese real estate debt.

“Only further widespread spillover to the general stock markets would have an impact on our results,” an Ageas spokesperson said.

Prudential Chief Executive Mike Wells told CNBC this week that the insurer’s exposure to Evergrande was “de minimis,” and that less than 5 percent of the insurer’s bond holdings were in Chinese real estate.

Prudential also has a joint venture in China.

Swiss Re did not have direct investments in Chinese property in its real estate portfolio, a spokesperson said.

By Lawrence White and Carolyn Cohn