China to launch property investment trusts to spur infrastructure development
Beijing is attempting to revive the economy, which has been hammered by the pandemic
Beijing
CHINA has announced plans to create a public market for real estate investment trusts (Reits), aiming to channel personal savings and private capital into infrastructure projects without overstretching already debt-laden local governments.
Beijing is seeking to ramp up infrastructure investment to revive the Chinese economy, which has been hammered by the novel coronavirus pandemic and contracted for the first time on record in the first quarter.
Until now China has only allowed privately-sold quasi-Reits in the real-estate sector.
Under the new initiative announced by the government, the country will see its first publicly-sold Reits, which are investment vehicles that are backed by income-producing properties and trade like stocks.
"This marks the start of a new era for China's Reits," said Stanley Ching, senior managing director at alternative investment manager Citic Capital.
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A Reits market helps unlock value trapped in existing real-estate assets and will channel private money into China's strategic infrastructure and offer investors a liquid investment product that generates stable income, he said.
Under the pilot scheme, Chinese mutual fund houses will launch Reits products that invest in infrastructure projects including warehouses, toll ways, airports, public utilities and industrial parks.
Reits help reduce debt risks in the short term, and will convert savings into investment capital in the long term, the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) and the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) said in a joint statement.
"The Reits market can help reboot China's economy, which is under downward pressure amid the virus epidemic," Zhang Zheng, a professor at Guanghua School of Management, Peking University, said in a note.
He also said that "it's imperative to reform the way Chinese infrastructure projects are financed," and that Reits can help introduce fresh capital and reduce leverage.
Currently, local infrastructure projects are mainly funded by regional governments creaking under mountains of debt.
China has already taken a series of measures to expand direct financing via capital markets, part of efforts to shift some risks from banks.
Regulators have fast-tracked approval for bond and share sales, and kicked off a reform of initial public offerings on Shenzhen's start-up board ChiNext.
The pilot scheme for Reits was launched after the NDRC and CSRC carried out in-depth research into mature Reits market overseas, the government said.
In the US, where Reits originated, there were about 220 listed Reits worth a total of US$1.27 trillion in market value as of June, 2019, according to Prof Zhang.
In Singapore, there are eight infrastructure-backed Reits, worth about US$8 billion, he said.
Mr Ching said it could take several years before China's Reits market can expand from infrastructure to other areas such as office buildings, hotels and shopping malls.
"I hope that day will come soon," he said. REUTERS
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