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    	<hl1 id="Headline1" class="1" style="Headline1">
		<lang class="3" style="Headline1"  font="ITC Giovanni Std"  size="34">China pushes Huarong to sell non-core units, mulls implicit support </lang>
	</hl1>

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     <p style=".Bodylaser">
	<lang class="3" style=".Bodylaser" font="ITC Giovanni Std" fontStyle="Bold">Reuters, </lang>
<lang  class="3" style=".Bodylaser" font="ITC Giovanni Std" fontStyle="Book Italic">Beijing
</lang>
</p>
<p style=".Bodylaser">
	<lang class="3" style=".Bodylaser" font="ITC Giovanni Std" fontStyle="Book">China is pushing China Huarong Asset Management Co to sell non-core assets, two people involved in the revamp told Reuters, while considering offering an implicit guarantee of the liabilities of the debt-laden bad-debt manager.
</lang>
</p>
<p style=".Bodylaser">
	<lang class="3" style=".Bodylaser" font="ITC Giovanni Std" fontStyle="Book">Regulators are pressing the state-controlled  “bad bank”, which has been trying to restructure since 2018, to sell units including a bank, a trust, an investment firm and a consumer finance firm, the sources said.
</lang>
</p>
<p style=".Bodylaser">
	<lang class="3" style=".Bodylaser" font="ITC Giovanni Std" fontStyle="Book">The plan, one source said, envisions the authorities informally backing $20 billion of dollar debt coming due this year for the sprawling company, one of the nation’s four giant state-owned asset managers. 
</lang>
</p>
<p style=".Bodylaser">
	<lang class="3" style=".Bodylaser" font="ITC Giovanni Std" fontStyle="Book">News of the plan lifted dollar bonds issued by Huarong Finance, a subsidiary of the company, to near three-week highs.
</lang>
</p>
<p style=".Bodylaser">
	<lang class="3" style=".Bodylaser" font="ITC Giovanni Std" fontStyle="Book">Huarong’s problems spooked investors in China’s dollar-bond market in April after it delayed its business results, prompting ratings downgrades, warnings from global agencies and an ongoing suspension in share trading. Huarong’s onshore and offshore subsidiaries have made timely repayments on maturing debt.
</lang>
</p>
<p style=".Bodylaser">
	<lang class="3" style=".Bodylaser" font="ITC Giovanni Std" fontStyle="Book">“The benefit of bailing out (Huarong) is great,” the other source said.  “So is the harm of not bailing it out.” The Beijing-based company, established in the late 1990s to handle soured debts at state banks, has the Ministry of Finance as its biggest shareholder. Former chairman Lai Xiaomin was executed in January after a graft probe into the period when he expanded Huarong into a financial conglomerate.
</lang>
</p>
<p style=".Bodylaser">
	<lang class="3" style=".Bodylaser" font="ITC Giovanni Std" fontStyle="Book">The authorities are considering asking the other state-owned asset managers - China Cinda Asset Management, Great Wall Asset Management and Oriental Asset Management - to undertake similar streamlining after Huarong, the sources said. They asked not to be identified because the information is not public and they are not authorised to speak to the news media.
</lang>
</p>
<p style=".Bodylaser">
	<lang class="3" style=".Bodylaser" font="ITC Giovanni Std" fontStyle="Book">Huarong told Reuters in an emailed statement on Friday that regulators have asked it to  “return to our roots, focus on our main business and build up core competitiveness.” 
</lang>
</p>
<p style=".Bodylaser">
	<lang class="3" style=".Bodylaser" font="ITC Giovanni Std" fontStyle="Book">It did not confirm or deny asset sales, saying it would make statements in the future, and did not comment on any debt guarantees.
</lang>
</p>
<p style=".Bodylaser">
	<lang class="3" style=".Bodylaser" font="ITC Giovanni Std" fontStyle="Book">“The company will earnestly fulfill our debt repayment obligations with a responsible attitude,” Huarong said,  “At the same time, the company’s liquidity is in good condition and we have made proper arrangements and adequate preparations for future bond repayment.” 
</lang>
</p>
<p style=".Bodylaser">
	<lang class="3" style=".Bodylaser" font="ITC Giovanni Std" fontStyle="Book">The Ministry of Finance and the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission (CBIRC), Huarong’s regulatory supervisor, did not immediately respond to requests for comment. The authorities have not made any final decisions on a rescue or on Huarong’s long-term business development prospects, the sources said. 
</lang>
</p>
<p style=".Bodylaser">
	<lang class="3" style=".Bodylaser" font="ITC Giovanni Std" fontStyle="Book">Regulators are waiting for the final audit results of Huarong’s delayed annual report, which could be released in August, before making such decisions, the second source said.
</lang>
</p>
<p style=".Bodylaser">
	<lang class="3" style=".Bodylaser" font="ITC Giovanni Std" fontStyle="Book">The backing for Huarong’s debt would not be a public announcement but more informal suasion from the authorities, as sometimes seen in China, to prevent creditors from taking drastic action, the first source said.
</lang>
</p>
<p style=".Bodylaser">
	<lang class="3" style=".Bodylaser" font="ITC Giovanni Std" fontStyle="Book">The CBIRC, for example, previously asked some banks not to withhold loans to Huarong and asked some state banks to be prepared to support it with cash, Reuters reported in April.
</lang>
</p>
<p style=".Bodylaser">
	<lang class="3" style=".Bodylaser" font="ITC Giovanni Std" fontStyle="Book">Following Reuters’ report on Friday, a perpetual bond issued by Huarong Finance added 7.5 cents to trade at 68 cents in the dollar, while other issues maturing in 2029 and 2027 jumped 5 cents and 5.5 cents respectively, according to Refinitiv data.
</lang>
</p>
<p style=".Bodylaser">
	<lang class="3" style=".Bodylaser" font="ITC Giovanni Std" fontStyle="Book">Beyond any rescue of Huarong, the plan aims to shore up confidence in investment-grade Chinese issuers in the offshore market, the two sources said.
</lang>
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