Millennials are borrowing heavily to invest in property, counting on the government to keep property prices buoyant.
However, the rise of shadow banking means the government lacks the levers it has historically pulled to prevent a debt crisis
by Andy Xie
China’s household debt has roughly quadrupled in the past five years to 62 trillion yuan (US$9.4 trillion).
Non-performing loans hit 40 per cent in 1998.
The 2015 stock market crash was largely prompted by shadow banking firms liquidating their positions.
The funds from such shadow lenders probably exceed 10 trillion yuan, much bigger than the subprime market that triggered the 2008 financial crisis.
The leverage-fuelled lending for stock market speculation in 2015 was one example.
The latest are the bankruptcies of residential rental operators. These entities rent properties from owners and re-lease them to end users, often at a loss. They keep cash flow positive by borrowing from shadow banks against the rental income.
Source: SCMP
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