When life gives you lemons, make lemonade. When China's economy gives you billions in bad loans, apparently you become a bill collector. That's the latest strategy from China Renaissance Holdings Ltd. (1911.HK), the investment bank that's had quite the tumultuous ride over the past two years.
The firm announced last Wednesday that it's paying 308 million yuan ($44 million) for two portfolios of nonperforming personal loans from subsidiaries of Qfin Holdings (QFIN). Specifically, the loans are coming from Fuzhou Qifu Financing Guarantee and Fuzhou Qifu Online Microcredit, both part of the private online lending ecosystem. Fuzhou Qifu Financing Guarantee provides payment guarantees for Qfin's lending partners, while Fuzhou Qifu Online Microcredit directly underwrites loans.
Here's where the math gets interesting. China Renaissance is paying just 277 million yuan for loans with a face value of 6.7 billion yuan from Fuzhou Qifu Financing Guarantee, plus another 31 million yuan for debt totaling 752 million yuan from Fuzhou Qifu Online Microcredit. That's buying at roughly four cents on the dollar. The discount is so steep because, well, these loans are deeply troubled.
The Appeal and the Risk
The attraction of distressed debt investing is straightforward: buy low, collect what you can, profit handsomely. When you're paying pennies on the dollar, you don't need to recover everything to make money. Even modest collection rates can generate impressive returns.
"The acquisitions represent a good opportunity for the group, as the market continues to recover, the group expects the recovery of relevant debts will improve over time, and the group is confident that a significant portion of the debts are able to be recovered over time, which is expected to result in attractive rate of investment returns to the group," China Renaissance said.
But here's the catch: you only make money if you actually recover the funds. And getting money from distressed borrowers is tough work, even for experienced collection agencies. For an investment bank without extensive experience in consumer debt collection, it's a real leap.
Consider what China Renaissance is actually buying. The loans from Fuzhou Qifu Financing Guarantee are overdue by an average of more than two years. The loans from Fuzhou Qifu Online Microcredit have been delinquent for an average of more than 400 days. All of them are unsecured, meaning there's no collateral to seize if borrowers don't pay. You're essentially buying IOUs from people who stopped paying a long time ago.
China Renaissance isn't completely new to troubled loans. Back in 2022, the firm provided a $25 million loan to an entity called Wallaby Medical Holding. That loan went south, forcing China Renaissance to write it down substantially and book an impairment charge. The company eventually settled the loan in the first half of last year, probably at a loss, after extending the maturity date by 12 months.
But dealing with one or two problematic borrowers is vastly different from chasing hundreds of thousands of individual consumers who've defaulted on their loans. And these aren't just any consumers. The people using non-bank lenders like Qfin are typically riskier borrowers who can't access traditional bank credit. The ones who defaulted are the weakest of that already risky group.
China's Growing Bad Debt Mountain
The opportunity China Renaissance is pursuing exists because China's economic slowdown is generating an expanding pile of bad debt. Official nonperforming loan ratios still look manageable, but many observers believe those figures understate reality as lenders use various techniques to delay classifying troubled loans as NPLs. Either way, banks face mounting pressure to clean up their balance sheets, creating robust demand among distressed debt buyers.
China addressed this problem before during the Asian financial crisis. In the late 1990s, the government created four major asset management companies, or AMCs, to absorb nonperforming loans from state-owned banks and prevent a broader financial crisis. Numerous regional AMCs emerged over the past decade as well. But there's simply too much bad debt now for these state-backed institutions to handle alone. Making matters worse, the AMCs themselves are struggling with growing impairment losses, reducing their ability to acquire more distressed assets.
That's created an opening for private capital, particularly for bad debt from non-public sector companies and individuals, which generally isn't a priority for the AMCs. Foreign hedge funds and specialist distressed investors like Oaktree Capital and Bain Capital Credit have been active in China for years. Domestic players have joined too, including DCL Investments, China's first private equity firm dedicated to distressed asset investments, founded in 2015. These investors traditionally focused on business loans, leveraging their expertise in asset valuation and corporate restructuring. But since 2021, when China introduced a pilot program allowing bulk transfers of personal NPLs, they've increasingly moved into consumer loans.
A Comeback Strategy
For China Renaissance, this distressed debt venture is part of a broader effort to rebuild after a devastating crisis. The firm was rocked in 2023 when its founder and chief rainmaker was detained on suspicion of bribery. The abrupt departure plunged the company into turmoil. As part of its recovery strategy, China Renaissance also announced plans last year to invest in Web 3.0, the decentralized internet built on blockchain and crypto assets.
The comeback appears to be gaining traction. China Renaissance's financial performance in the first half of last year looked promising, returning to profitability helped by a resurgence in Hong Kong IPOs. Investors seem to like the new direction. The stock jumped 16% in the week after announcing the bad debt investment plan.
The shares now trade at a price-to-sales ratio of 2.2, comparable to the 2.5 for Hong Kong-listed shares of CICC (3908.HK), generally considered China's largest homegrown investment bank. That ratio is roughly double the 1.15 for Qfin, reflecting the pessimism many investors harbor toward fintech lenders.
Playing It Smart
Investing in bad loans is inherently high-risk. You're betting you can extract value where the original lender couldn't. You're competing with other debt buyers, dealing with borrowers who may have nothing left to give, and navigating China's evolving regulatory environment for debt collection.
But China Renaissance is starting cautiously, committing a relatively modest amount of capital in this initial effort. If the bet pays off, it could provide a nice boost to the company's financials and open the door to more distressed debt investments. If it fails, the damage will be contained. It's a calculated gamble from a firm that's learning to navigate choppy waters after nearly capsizing two years ago. Whether China Renaissance can turn sour loans into sweet returns remains to be seen, but at least they're not betting the farm on their first attempt at playing bill collector.




