Hong Kong

Bank of America Corp., seeking to bolster its financial standing in the face of new government requirements, raised $7.3 billion from Asian investors Tuesday through the sale of a roughly 5.7% stake in China Construction Bank Corp., according to people familiar with the matter, The Wall Street Journal reported. For the U.S. lender, the move marks a significant step to raising $34 billion in capital needed to meet the requirements of a new U.S. government stress test for lenders.
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Bankruptcy petitions in Hong Kong rose to a more than five-year high in March as the recession in the city deepened, government data showed Friday. The government said individuals and non-limited companies filed 1,872 bankruptcy petitions during the month, up from 1,500 in February, Dow Jones Newswires reported. March's figure was the highest since July 2003, when 1,899 bankruptcy petitions were filed as Hong Kong was recovering from the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome crisis. The data come amid signs of a further deterioration in local economic conditions.
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All around Asia, leveraged finance professionals are reinventing themselves as restructuring specialists, a survival strategy amid layoffs and a slowed pipeline of splashy public offerings, mergers and acquisitions, The Wall Street Journal reported. Investment banks and law firms here also are rushing to put together teams for dealing with what bankers are predicting will be a wave of business in the region in the second half of this year. In the U.S. and Europe, bankruptcy and restructuring specialists tend to focus on those situations for entire careers.
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Larry Yung quit as chairman of Citic Pacific Ltd. after the biggest currency loss reported by a Chinese company triggered a police investigation, Bloomberg reported. Yung, the son of a former Chinese vice president, will be replaced by Chang Zhenming, 52, the vice chairman of parent Citic Group, Citic Pacific said in a statement to the Hong Kong stock exchange today. The 67-year-old executive, ranked the nation’s richest man in 2005, is leaving after currency losses of HK$14.6 billion ($1.9 billion) forced him to seek help from Beijing.
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Invista Real Estate, the UK's largest listed property fund manager, is poised to buy the Asian property business of Babcock & Brown, the Australian investment house that was placed into voluntary administration last month, the Financial Times reported. Invista, which is majority owned by HBOS, is to acquire Babcock & Brown's fund management platform in the region, including offices in Hong Kong and Singapore and more than 20 staff.
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A tiny default by a Russian aircraft-leasing company is sending ripples through the much larger market for the country's debt, The Wall Street Journal reported. The default by Finance Leasing Co. on $250 million of bonds is the first by a Russian state-owned company on foreign debt since the country's 1998 financial meltdown. That is rattling foreign investors, who worry that Russia could allow many more companies to renege on billions of dollars of debt while it grapples with an economic and financial crisis.
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Bankruptcy petitions in Hong Kong rose to a more than five-year high in February as the recession in the city deepened, government data showed Friday. The government said 1,500 bankruptcy petitions from individuals and non-limited firms were filed during the month, up from 1,266 in January, Dow Jones Newswires reported. February's figure was the highest since October 2003, when 1,648 bankruptcy petitions were filed as Hong Kong was recovering from the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome crisis. The data come amid signs of further deterioration in local economic conditions.
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Foreign lenders that rushed into China in recent years are watching nervously as a number of companies there teeter on the brink of insolvency. Their worry: The nation's bankruptcy laws may leave them with virtually nothing, The Wall Street Journal reported. Several big Western investors--Citigroup Inc., hedge-fund manager Citadel Investment Group LLC, Credit Suisse Group and CLSA Capital Partners--are seeking to get back between $100 million and $200 million in loans extended to a Chinese steelmaker, according to people familiar with the matter.
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Financial Secretary John Tsang predicted Wednesday the Hong Kong economy will contract by 2% to 3% this year, and he pledged to boost government spending to ease the pains of a deepening recession, The Wall Street Journal reported. Mr. Tsang said in his annual budget address that Hong Kong's government will spend a total 301.6 billion Hong Kong dollars (US$38.66 billion) in the next fiscal year that starts April 1. That figure would be down from estimated spending of HK$317.8 billion in the fiscal year ending March 31. Critics have charged that Mr.
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Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. has asked the bankruptcy court to let it retain Jones Day as special counsel to help the former financial services company with issues that have arisen in the Asia-Pacific region related to its Chapter 11 case. In a motion filed Wednesday in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York, Lehman said the law firm would help it in Hong Kong, the Philippines, Taiwan, Japan and Australia with matters related to its bankruptcy filing.
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