PARIKRAMA
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Thanks for the summary. I dont have access to these reports anymore.
When I look at a financial statements, contingent liabilities are the most interesting items to me as they are off balance sheet items. These liabilities in themselves aren't bad provided the resources are present to take the hit if they go sideways.
The other factor which I feel is often over-looked are the specifics of asset quality specially by rating agencies. China in this regard is a big question mark for me. They have been investing quite heavily in emerging markets all over the world and some of these investment are guided purely by geo-politics rather than financial risk and viability. While on paper these investments may be credit worthy, there is a lot of fudging of actuals and off the book quid pro quo. To be clear all countries indulge in this practice but not on the scale China does. The only other peer in terms of total investment is Japan and Japanese investments are financially very sound and clean. Germans and others in the list have very different set of criteria and most of the investment is on corporate level so not worth discussing.
Contingent liabilities is a big topic of interest no doubt.. The more you dwell into it, the more you will be fascinated by risks and underlying assets relationship aspect and how every one handles such risks... of course not every one is prudent nor every decision is always correct. But in general the risks of today can at least be partially forecasted better then say 2-3 decades back..
Oh yes, my friend the investments in emerging markets or say in African continent to many private sector companies of China doing projects via a loan or via a direct FDI route all are pointers to a much deeper risk contagion.. The EM itself are risky and these countries cannot sustain much of the issues and thus their viability+financial risk is always way too high..
An example I quote is this from the article
The bulk of China’s FDI has been concentrated in a relatively few countries. Between 2003 and 2007, five countries—Nigeria, South Africa, Sudan, Algeria and Zambia—accounted for more than 70 percent of China’s FDI. While these countries remain important recipients, others such as Guinea, Ghana, Democratic Republic of the Congo and Ethiopia have joined the list in recent years. In 2010, Ethiopia had, for example, 580 registered Chinese companies operating with estimated investment capital of $2.2 billion. Some of this new FDI is coming thru Chinese special economic and trade cooperation zones. China is working with African counterparts to establish seven of them: two each in Zambia and Nigeria and one in Mauritius, Egypt and Ethiopia.
Source: China’s Investments in Africa | Africa Up Close
Now have a look at few data pointers
These 2 slides are from D&B
This one is from Euler Hermes
So lets check here
- Nigeria - Sensitive Risk
- South Africa - Medium Risk
- Sudan - High Risk
- Algeria - Medium Risk
- Zambia - Sensitive Risk
- Guinea - High Risk
- Ghana - Medium Risk
- Democratic Republic of the Congo - Sensitive Risk
- Ethiopia - Sensitive Risk
- Mauritius - Low Risk
- Egypt. - High Risk
- Sierra Leone - High Risk
- Angola - Sensitive Risk
- Zimbabwe - High Risk
- Gabon - Sensitive Risk
A simple comparison here for the world by EH is like this
Americas
Europe and Middle East
Asia and Australia and everybody
These slides taken from Euler Hermes.
If you see the majority of the high risk and sensitive risk are the places which needs external support in the form of FDI and investments by China's pvt sector companies. China has done that no doubt but looking at today the risk aspect has increased by a good margin..
I am not saying its not manageable but risk is biased towards more problems than less problems envisioned when these investments were made.
@jhungary @Nihonjin1051 @AUSTERLITZ
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