China
to Spend $618 Million To
Bail
Out
State
Conglomerate
Associated
Press
December 1,
2005
4:49
a.m.
SHANGHAI
- China
has arranged a five-billion-yuan ($618 million)
bailout for one of the country's biggest state-run
conglomerates -- a Shanghai-based company set up
in 1992 as a model for restructured
enterprises.
China
Chengtong Group, newly designated as a state-owned
asset-management company, will take over China
Worldbest Group and help the company cope with
outstanding loans totaling 25 billion yuan, the
official Xinhua News Agency and other state media
reported Thursday.
The
funds from Chengtong will be used to help reduce
China Worldbest's liabilities and resolve a cash
crunch, the reports said.
The
reports didn't explain why China Worldbest was
having trouble repaying its loans. Worldbest, set
up in 1992, is a conglomerate of drug makers and
textile companies formed through about 90 mergers
of smaller state enterprises. It has 60,000
employees and reported assets of 57 billion yuan
in 2004.
Xinhua
said Beijing-based Chengtong, which was founded in
1992 as a logistics company, would take control of
Worldbest.
Chengtong's
subsidiary, China Chengtong Development Group,
whose shares are traded in Hong Kong, reported a
net loss in the first half of this year of 61.9
million Hong Kong dollars (US$7.7 million),
compared with a net profit of HK$149 million in
the year-earlier period.
China
has been gradually reducing government holdings in
many smaller companies, while boosting state
control of industries considered to be
strategically important.
The
state-owned Assets Supervision and Administration
Commission and the China Development Bank laid the
groundwork for the bailout in September, arranging
a 20 billion yuan policy loan for Chengtong Group,
through 2008, Xinhua said. Part of those funds
will be used to pay for the cost of taking over
Worldbest, it said.
According
to Worldbest's Web site, the company is
Shanghai's
fourth-largest industrial
group.
The
company owns
China's
largest pharmaceutical group and its largest
textile group.
The company originally was set up as part of
Shanghai's
massive restructuring of its textile
industry.