Morgan Stanley among biggest lenders to embattled Luckin founder: source

Published Wed, Apr 8, 2020 · 02:30 AM

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    [HONG KONG] Morgan Stanley, Credit Suisse Group and Haitong International Securities Group were among the biggest participants in a series of margin loans to Luckin Coffee's founder before accounting fraud allegations at the high-flying Chinese company triggered a collapse in the stock and caused him to default, a person with knowledge of the matter said.

    The banks were part of a group that extended margin debt to Luckin chairman Lu Zhengyao across three funding rounds, said the person, who asked not to be identified as the matter is private. Haitong put up US$140 million, while Morgan Stanley and Credit Suisse lent about US$100 million each, the person said. Barclays, Goldman Sachs Group and China International Capital had smaller exposures, the person said, adding that a portion of the loans were repaid before the default.

    Goldman Sachs said in a statement on Monday that an entity controlled by Mr Lu's family trust reneged on US$518 million of margin debt and that lenders had seized as many as 76.4 million Luckin shares. The stake was worth about US$335 million based on the closing price on Monday, down from more than US$2 billion before the scandal broke. It's unclear whether the banks have sold the shares or whether they'll be forced to book losses on their loans. Goldman, which didn't elaborate on individual banks' exposures, was given the role of handling the share disposal.

    Haitong International didn't respond to emailed questions from Bloomberg News, while the rest of the banks declined to comment.

    Luckin, the biggest challenger to Starbucks in China, has lost US$5.5 billion of market value since last week after saying its chief operating officer and some of its employees may have fabricated billions of yuan in sales, upending what was supposed to be one of the country's best growth stories.

    The episode has dealt another blow to banks that worked closely with Luckin on its expansion over the past years, including arranging its initial public offering. Credit Suisse, which also led a group raising convertible debt for the coffee chain, has been sued over its role in Luckin's US share sale.

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    Shares of CICC and Haitong International, which also helped underwrite Luckin's initial public offering, fell more than 4 per cent in Hong Kong on Tuesday. Trading in Luckin's stock was suspended in New York.

    Goldman Sachs said lenders have full recourse to claim money back from Mr Lu and his spouse, but it's unclear whether the couple still has enough assets to make up for any potential shortfall. The scandal has erased most of Mr Lu's wealth, knocking him out of the ranks of China's billionaires.

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