Tuesday 23 June 2015

China Margin Trades Buckle Leaving $364 Billion at Risk


China Margin Trades Buckle Leaving $364 Billion at Risk



The biggest tumble in Chinese shares since 2008 is proving especially painful for margin traders as their favorite stocks sink faster than the benchmark index, raising the risk of forced liquidations.
The 30 equities in Shanghai with the highest levels of margin debt relative to tradable shares have dropped 17 percent on average since the market peaked on June 12, versus a 13 percent decline for the Shanghai Composite Index. Margin positions on the city’s bourse fell for the first time in a month on Friday, a sign that leveraged investors are unwinding bets after they grew more than five-fold in the past year.
With at least $364 billion of borrowed money riding on stocks in Shanghai and Shenzhen, losses on those positions threaten to magnify market declines as traders sell shares to meet margin calls. China’s benchmark index tumbled at the fastest pace among global equity gauges last week, after a world-beating 152 percent gain in the previous 12 months.
“It’s a self-fulfilling prophecy,” Roshan Padamadan, the founder and manager of Luminance Global Fund, said in an interview on Bloomberg Television from Singapore. “As people try to book profits, they’ll find out that there’s nobody on the other side of the trade.”
EGing Photovoltaic Technology Co., a Chinese solar-equipment maker in eastern Jiangsu province, dropped 21 percent since June 12 after outstanding margin bets climbed to 44 percent of the company’s free-float adjusted market capitalization, the highest level among more than 480 equities tracked by Bloomberg and the Shanghai Stock Exchange.

Margin Call

Shanghai Construction Group Co., with a margin trade ratio of about 34 percent, has retreated 19 percent, paring gains over the past year to 243 percent. Shenzhen-based Joincare Pharmaceutical Group Industry Co. declined 20 percent after margin bets reached almost 27 percent of free float.
In a margin trade, investors use their own money for just a portion of the stock purchase, borrowing the rest from a brokerage. The loans are backed by the investors’ equity holdings, meaning they may be compelled to sell to repay their debt when prices fall.
“You can see from Friday’s sharp decline that people are already cutting losses on margin trading,” said Mari Oshidari, a Hong Kong-based strategist at Okasan Securities Group Inc. “This is still ongoing, so we should watch out for further selling pressure.”
While margin debt has surged in recent months, it’s still at manageable levels relative to the size of China’s $8.8 trillion stock market, according to Aaron Boesky, the chief executive officer at Marco Polo Pure Asset Management, which runs a China-focused hedge fund.

Rally Forecast

Investors should take advantage of market declines to increase holdings, Boesky said, anticipating the Shanghai Composite may rally another 36 percent to surpass its all-time high in October 2007.
“It is best to buy the dips,” he said in an e-mail on June 21. “Consolidation allows for those already high returns to sell and take profit, and those who have resisted jumping into the market to now have an appetizing entry point.”
Margin traders have been such an important source of demand for Chinese shares that any pullback, particularly one caused by regulatory efforts to curb the use of leverage, will weigh on the market, according to Ronald Wan, the chief executive officer of Partners Capital International in Hong Kong.
Almost all of this year’s biggest declines in the Shanghai Composite, including a 6.5 percent slump on May 28, were sparked by investor concerns over margin-trading restrictions.
The China Securities Regulatory Commission is planning to curb the amount of margin trades and short sales financed by brokerages to no more than four times their net capital, according to draft rules posted on its website June 12. Brokerages including GF Securities Co. and Haitong Securities Co. have already tightened lending requirements to limit their exposure to any market downturn.
Chinese stocks have been “heavily reliant on margin financing,” Wan said in an interview on Bloomberg Television. “If the government actually cracks down on certain forms of financing, a correction is unavoidable.”


http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-06-22/china-margin-trades-buckle-as-selloff-puts-364-billion-at-risk

No comments: