China Development Financial Holding Corp (
Texas-based Lone Star and China Development Asset Management Corp (中華開發資產管理公司), which in January signed an agreement on the joint venture, are now operating separately, China Development Financial spokeswoman Grace Fang (方鳳山) said, confirming a Chinese-language newspaper report.
"We have different views on the valuation of problem assets and how to share them," Fang said. ``Going our separate ways will be better for China Development as well as Lone Star.''
China Development failed to set up a similar venture with Morgan Stanley last year, and now plans to go it alone. Taishin Financial Holdings Co (台新金控) and CTB Financial Holding Co (交銀金控) are among Taiwanese banks that have set up their own asset management units, to reduce the more than NT$1.4 trillion (US$40.3 billion) of bad loans from last year's recession and a decade-long property-market slump.
"The pressure is increasing on banks to write off their bad loans," said Susan Chu, a bank analyst at Taiwan Ratings Corp (
The breakdown in the venture comes a month after China Development Asset beat Lone Star and three other foreign asset management companies for the NT$9 billion (US$259 million) of bad loans auctioned by United World Chinese Commercial Bank (世華銀行).
The company doesn't need another partner to buy problem assets, said spokeswoman Fang. Still, it doesn't rule out the possibility it may work with another foreign partner "on special cases such as buying a troubled steelmaker."
Lone Star and China Development have been competing with Cerberus Asia Capital Management LLC, Lend Lease Corp and other asset-management companies to buy dud credits, which make up 10.17 percent of total loans as of September, according to the central bank.
Including estimated unreported bad loans, Standard & Poor's expects the non-performing loan ratio in Taiwan to fall to 15 percent by the end of the year from 18 percent, Chu said.
"It's hard to tell if the local asset management companies have the capacity to handle bigger bad-loan cases," Chu said. Managing their own loans "is a balance between timing and profitability."
DOLLAR CHALLENGE: BRICS countries’ growing share of global GDP threatens the US dollar’s dominance, which some member states seek to displace for world trade US president-elect Donald Trump on Saturday threatened 100 percent tariffs against a bloc of nine nations if they act to undermine the US dollar. His threat was directed at countries in the so-called BRICS alliance, which consists of Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa, Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran and the United Arab Emirates. Turkey, Azerbaijan and Malaysia have applied to become members and several other countries have expressed interest in joining. While the US dollar is by far the most-used currency in global business and has survived past challenges to its preeminence, members of the alliance and other developing nations say they are fed
LIMITED MEASURES: The proposed restrictions on Chinese chip exports are weaker than previously considered, following lobbying by major US firms, sources said US President Joe Biden’s administration is weighing additional curbs on sales of semiconductor equipment and artificial intelligence (AI) memory chips to China that would escalate the US crackdown on Beijing’s tech ambitions, but stop short of some stricter measures previously considered, said sources familiar with the matter. The restrictions could be unveiled as soon as next week, said the sources, who emphasized that the timing and contours of the rules have changed several times, and that nothing is final until they are published. The measures follow months of deliberations by US officials, negotiations with allies in Japan and the Netherlands, and
Foxconn Technology Group (富士康科技集團) yesterday said it expects any impact of new tariffs from US president-elect Donald Trump to hit the company less than its rivals, citing its global manufacturing footprint. Young Liu (劉揚偉), chairman of the contract manufacturer and key Apple Inc supplier, told reporters after a forum in Taipei that it saw the primary impact of any fresh tariffs falling on its clients because its business model is based on contract manufacturing. “Clients may decide to shift production locations, but looking at Foxconn’s global footprint, we are ahead. As a result, the impact on us is likely smaller compared to
TECH COMPETITION: The US restricted sales of two dozen types of manufacturing equipment and three software tools, and blacklisted 140 more Chinese entities US President Joe Biden’s administration unveiled new restrictions on China’s access to vital components for chips and artificial intelligence (AI), escalating a campaign to contain Beijing’s technological ambitions. The US Department of Commerce slapped additional curbs on the sale of high-bandwidth memory (HBM) and chipmaking gear, including that produced by US firms at foreign facilities. It also blacklisted 140 more Chinese entities that it accused of acting on Beijing’s behalf, although it did not name them in an initial statement. Full details on the new sanctions and Entity List additions were to be published later yesterday, a US official said. The US “will