The truth about Asian investment banking
China’s $1.7 trillion hangover

China’s $1.7 trillion hangover

Up to 40% of China’s $1.7 trillion LGFV loans are at high risk of default. What’s a panicking Beijing to do?

June 2010

Debt: Latin America breaks new boundaries

The region’s debt markets have withstood the convulsions in western Europe with surprising ease. Has the global perception of risk irrevocably changed or will the region eventually get caught up in the maelstrom? Sudip Roy reports.


THE NATURAL ORDER of the bond markets is in a spin. The headlines are full of IMF bailouts, debt restructurings and fiscal austerity. But for once the crisis is not in the emerging markets. Instead it’s Europe’s policymakers that are struggling to prevent sovereign debt defaults from tearing their region apart. In contrast, their counterparts in the developing world look on as concerned spectators. Nowhere more so than in Latin America, which has experienced several debt crises over the past 30 years but today is a byword for financial stability compared with Europe and the US.

There are pockets of distress – Argentina, Venezuela, Bolivia and Ecuador are all on the margins of financial rectitude. But it’s a sign of how far Latin America has progressed over the past decade that the wider region is able to shake off negative news out of these trouble spots...


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