logo
Tycoons damaging Hong Kong's credit culture

Tycoons damaging Hong Kong's credit culture

The Star11-07-2025
The city's old money are dishing out one nasty surprise after another. — Bloomberg
HOW creditworthy are Hong Kong's billionaire-tycoons?
Despite the glamour and prestige they project, the city's old money are dishing out one nasty surprise after another.
As bankers and investors wake up to the reality that they might never be made whole, the easy credit culture long afforded to the elite will inevitably come to an end.
New World Development Co's decision not to repay coupons on its perpetual notes was a rude awakening but it was by no means an outlier.
Emperor International Holdings Ltd, a fellow developer that sells luxury apartments, said it had HK$16.6bil (US$2.1bil) in bank borrowings that are either overdue or have breached loan covenants, which may result in immediate repayment requests.
Emperor is a household brand in Hong Kong.
The 82-year-old patriarch Albert Yeung started with a jewellery store in the late 1960s, selling Rolex and Omega watches.
But over the years, the 'king of clocks and watches' expanded into media and real estate. Emperor Entertainment, in particular, is closely associated with local culture. It manages a roster of canto-pop singers and actors such as Nicholas Tse.
Or consider Far East Consortium International Ltd, which went public more than half a century ago.
The builder, known for projects at the city's iconic old Kai Tak airport, has pan-Asia ambition.
It has joined forces with Chow Tai Fook – New World's parent – to develop a casino complex in Brisbane ahead of the 2032 Summer Olympics.
Just like New World, Far East is sowing confusion among its US$360mil perpetual note holders.
In its latest annual report released in late June, the company said it would no longer pay dividends.
Investors are now worried that it would follow its business partner's footsteps by not repaying coupons.
The builder's open market operations are equally alarming.
In the fiscal year ending March, it bought US$4mil principal amount of perpetuals but resold at a loss.
This is a sharp turn of events.
Last September, Far East won a concession from its investors, buying time to redeem debt.
The builder promised then that it would 'aim to initiate partial call' in the first quarter of 2025.
Its own trading activities suggest it has not done so. Until recently, the city's old money had it easy.
The name brand itself spelled investment grade.
As of last June, nearly 70% of New World's bank loans were unsecured.
In addition, local borrowers could issue bonds governed by English law.
By comparison, dollar notes from mainland developers, such as China Evergrande Group, had to follow New York law.
For issuers, this law might be more stringent in the event of consent solicitation, where a company asks to change the terms of its securities. But that leniency is running thin.
Granted, New World managed to eke out an US$11.2bil loan refinancing deal – perhaps because when it owes banks so much money, it owns them.
Others may not be so lucky. — Bloomberg
Shuli Ren is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering Asian markets. The views expressed here are the writer's own.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

NZ central bank cuts rates to three-year low
NZ central bank cuts rates to three-year low

The Star

time28 minutes ago

  • The Star

NZ central bank cuts rates to three-year low

Borrowing costs: People walk towards the entrance of the central bank in the New Zealand capital city of Wellington. The RBNZ lifted rates by 525 bps between October 2021 and September 2023 to curb inflation. — Reuters WELLINGTON: New Zealand's central bank has cut its policy rate by 25 basis points (bps) to a three-year low of 3%, and flags further reductions in the coming months as policymakers warn of domestic and global headwinds to growth. The New Zealand dollar fell as much as 0.8% to US$0.59, while two-year swap rates slumped as deep as 2.96%, their lowest level since early 2022, as the decidedly dovish stance caught markets off guard. The Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) said the economy had stalled in the second quarter, and that the committee debated holding rates as well as reducing them by 25 bps or 50 bps. The cut in the official cash rate (OCR) by a quarter point was in line with a Reuters poll, in which all but two of the 30 economists surveyed correctly forecast the RBNZ's decision, after the bank held policy steady in July. The central bank has slashed rates by 250 bps since August 2024 to underpin a fragile recovery, taking advantage of expectations inflation will return to 2% next year and to buffer the economy from a broad shakeup in US tariff policy. 'There are upside and downside risks to the economic outlook. Cautious behaviour by households and businesses could further dampen economic growth' the RBNZ said in its accompanying policy statement. 'Alternatively, the economic recovery could accelerate as the full effects of interest rate reductions flow through the economy.' The central bank forecast in its monetary policy statement that the cash rate will be at 2.71% in the fourth quarter of 2025, below a forecast of 2.92% in May. In the first quarter of 2026 it expects it to average 2.55%, lower than the previously forecast 2.85%. 'If medium-term inflation pressures continue to ease as expected, there is scope to lower the OCR further,' the statement added. A global frontrunner in withdrawing pandemic-era stimulus, the RBNZ lifted rates 525 bps between October 2021 and September 2023 to curb inflation in the most aggressive tightening since the official cash rate was introduced in 1999. The punishing borrowing costs, however, took a heavy toll on demand and tipped the economy into recession last year. While, the South Pacific nation has emerged from the slump, growth remains weak and is being further hampered by a slowdown in the global economy and the government's tight fiscal policy. Adding to the domestic economic stress, unemployment is also rising. New Zealand's annual inflation remains within the RBNZ's 1% to 3% target band at 2.7%. The central bank is forecasting it will increase to 3% in the third quarter. — Reuters

LG-backed Alphonso gears up for listing
LG-backed Alphonso gears up for listing

The Star

time35 minutes ago

  • The Star

LG-backed Alphonso gears up for listing

SEOUL: US-based connected TV advertising company Alphonso, majority-owned by LG Electronics, is gearing up for a Nasdaq listing in the second half of 2025, positioning itself at the centre of LG's push to turn smart TVs into integrated digital platforms. At a press conference in Seoul on Tuesday, Alphonso founder and board member Ashish Chordia emphasised the company's role in advancing LG's long-term vision for media-centric home entertainment. 'Alphonso will be instrumental in turning LG's smart TVs into digital platforms where content, advertising, commerce and artificial intelligence seamlessly converge,' Chordia said. Founded in 2013 and headquartered in Mountain View, California, Alphonso specialises in TV viewership data analytics and personalised advertising. LG entered the company in 2020 through Zenith, a subsidiary of LG Electronics, which acquired a 65.7% stake. Since then, Alphonso has launched LG Ad Solutions and rapidly expanded across North America, Europe and Latin America. Leveraging LG's webOS-powered smart TV ecosystem, which now encompasses more than 200 million devices worldwide, Alphonso has strengthened monetisation capabilities through targeted advertising. Its core technology, automatic content recognition embedded in LG smart TVs, enables real-time tracking of viewing behaviour, allowing advertisers to manage campaigns from audience targeting and ad delivery to performance analysis on a unified platform. Alphonso's advertising portfolio spans native home screen placements, commercials streamed via more than 350 live channels and 7,000 video-on-demand titles and cross-device campaigns that extend to mobile, tablet and desktop users. Chordia pointed to successful case studies as evidence of Alphonso's impact. A Lexus campaign tied to the US Open improved positive brand perception by 64% and boosted purchase intent by 37%. Wells Fargo expanded its audience reach by 17.2%, while a pharmaceutical brand increased engagement among Spanish-speaking viewers by 15%. Data analytics firm Experian recorded ad recall levels 13 times higher than the industry average. LG Electronics sees Alphonso as a key driver of its broader strategy to shift from a manufacturing-focused home entertainment business to a media and solutions-oriented division. In January, LG Electronics chief executive officer Cho Joo-wan revealed that advertising and content revenue generated through webOS surpassed one trillion won in 2023. By 2030, the company aims to grow platform-based service revenue more than five-fold, with platform operations expected to contribute over 20% of total operating profit. 'Through Alphonso, this vision will become a reality,' Chordia said, noting that the firm competes with Samsung Ads and Roku in the global connected TV market. 'We will continue to work with LG to accelerate technology investment, platform innovation and global expansion.' Alphonso has already filed a registration statement with the US Securities and Exchange Commission. While declining to disclose specifics of the initial public offering timeline or deal size due to regulatory restrictions, the company confirmed that it has met the conditions for a US listing agreed upon at the time of Zenith's investment. — The Korea Herald/ANN

Oil climbs 2% on drop in US crude inventories
Oil climbs 2% on drop in US crude inventories

The Star

time39 minutes ago

  • The Star

Oil climbs 2% on drop in US crude inventories

Brent crude futures were up US$1.05, or 1.6%, to settle at US$66.84 a barrel. US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures rose 86 cents, or 1.4%, to settle at US$63.21. NEW YORK: Oil prices climbed about 2% on Wednesday on a bigger-than-expected weekly drop in US crude inventories as investors awaited the next steps in talks to end the Ukraine war, with sanctions on Russian crude remaining in place for now. Brent crude futures were up US$1.05, or 1.6%, to settle at US$66.84 a barrel. US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures rose 86 cents, or 1.4%, to settle at US$63.21. The US Energy Information Administration said energy firms pulled 6.0 million barrels of crude from inventories during the week ended August 15. That was bigger than the draw of 1.8 million barrels forecast by analysts in a Reuters poll and the decline of 2.4 million barrels that market sources said the American Petroleum Institute trade group cited in its figures on Tuesday. "We had a decent-sized crude drawdown. We saw a rebound in exports ... That and the strong refinery demand really makes this a bullish report," said John Kilduff, partner with Again Capital. On Tuesday, crude prices fell more than 1% – with WTI closing at its lowest level since May 30 – on optimism that an agreement to end the Russia-Ukraine war seemed closer. "Much of the choppy price action has been driven by daily updates to the Ukraine/Russian negotiations that have gone back and forth from bearish to bullish as far as the impact on future oil balances is concerned," analysts at energy advisory firm Ritterbusch and Associates said in a note. US President Donald Trump conceded that Russian President Vladimir Putin might not want to make a deal. Russia was the second-biggest producer of crude in 2024 behind the US, so any agreement that could ease sanctions on Moscow should boost the amount of Russian oil available for export to global markets. On Tuesday, Trump said he had ruled out putting US troops on the ground in Ukraine, but said the US might provide air support as part of a deal to end Russia's war in the country. On Wednesday, Russia said attempts to resolve security issues relating to Ukraine without Moscow's participation were a "road to nowhere", sounding a warning to the West as it scrambles to work out guarantees for Kyiv's future protection. Russia said it expects to continue supplying oil to India despite warnings from the US, Russian embassy officials in New Delhi said on Wednesday, adding that Moscow hopes trilateral talks will soon take place with India and China. Trump has announced an additional tariff of 25% on Indian goods exported to the US from August 27, as a punishment for buying Russian oil. India's state-run refiners Indian Oil and Bharat Petroleum have bought Russian oil for September and October delivery, resuming purchases after discounts widened, two company officials aware of the matter said on Wednesday. Russian forces have advanced in the east of Ukraine's Dnipropetrovsk region, taking the village of Novoheorhiivka close to the Donetsk region, Russia's defence ministry said on Wednesday. "The likelihood of a quick resolution to the conflict with Russia now seems unlikely," Daniel Hynes, senior commodity strategist at ANZ, said in a note. In other supply news, Iran believes the moment has not yet arrived for "effective" nuclear talks with Washington, Tehran's top diplomat said on Wednesday. Iran was the third-biggest producer of crude in the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec) in 2024 behind Saudi Arabia and Iraq, so any agreement to ease sanctions on Tehran should boost Iranian oil exports to global markets. In Saudi Arabia, meanwhile, crude exports slipped in June to their lowest level in three months, according to data from the Joint Organizations Data Initiative (JODI). In Norway, the second biggest oil producer in Europe after Russia, combined oil and gas production exceeded an official forecast by 3.9% in July, according to the Norwegian Offshore Directorate (NOD). — Reuters

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store