Shotgunner51
RETIRED INTL MOD
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If it is indeed through debt, how does China plan to pay back the debt? Most of the HSR lines aren't even operationally profitable, leave alone net profitable.
What "China"? The People's Republic of China owes nobody on HSR, zero debt, so pay back to whom, aliens? On the contrary, the state owns 100% equity of a corporation - China Railway Company - which has net asset of positive RMB 2.3T.
The China Railway Company has more assets (RMB 6.5T, yes, including the 20,000 km of HSR) than debts (RMB 4.2T), maybe sell some assets? Or convert some assets by PPP to deleverage? Or maybe debt-equity swap with creditors? Or IPO? Or maybe get a share out of incremental tax revenue (land value) from regional governments that benefit from HSR's presence? Or skip working with regional governments, use HK MTR model, i.e. directly integrate and land & real estate development into the company's book?
http://www.theatlantic.com/china/ar...ng-kongs-public-transportation-system/279528/
http://www.bre.polyu.edu.hk/Happeni...nce/RailwayandPropertyModel-MTRExperience.pdf
http://www.bre.polyu.edu.hk/Happeni...nce/RailwayandPropertyModel-MTRExperience.pdf
China is a savings-oriented country, savings rate (Gross National Savings, as % of GDP) is so high that it ties with Singapore as world's 2nd highest, only after Qatar! Note the latter two are super-wealthy small economies. So if you insist, China Railway Company deleverages entirely, such volume of liquidity goes back to flood the banks, what shall the banks do? Force depositors to withdraw their savings, take home and stack under their pillows? Or goes into negative interests rate and punish savers? Or ask PBoC to buy back?
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