China’s shadow banking and trust industry, once a pillar of high returns for wealthy investors, is now in crisis due to the property market collapse. The government is letting investors bear the losses, signalling a new era of financial discipline, but at the cost of undermining confidence in the system.
The Zhongrong International Trust Co, which managed $108 billion in 2022, has been deemed insolvent by state-appointed custodians, marking a significant blow to China’s $3.7 trillion trust industry, Bloomberg reported.
The industry’s woes, including at least 162 high-yielding trust product defaults since 2024, have eroded confidence among China’s elite and could undermine a consumer revival the government is counting on to support the economy.
The Zhongrong trust collapsed due to heavy losses from real estate and property developer defaults. This has affected more than 30,000 individuals and over 2,000 institutions, primarily wealthy investors. The government refused to give any bailout, enforcing stricter regulations with a focus on risk containment. But the development has had wider impact, having shaken investor confidence, risk of further defaults and economic headwinds.
What are Chinese trust companies and shadow banks?
Trust companies in China are part of the country’s so-called shadow banking sector. These are financial institutions that operate outside the traditional banking system, offering investment products to wealthy individuals and companies, and often investing in riskier areas like real estate.
Shadow banks are less regulated than ordinary banks, which means they can take on more risk but also face less oversight. The sector grew rapidly during China’s economic boom, reaching a value of around $3.7 trillion, but much of this growth was fuelled by lending to property developers and local governments.
What happened with Zhongrong International Trust?
Zhongrong International Trust was one of China’s largest trust companies, managing about $108 billion in 2022. It collapsed after suffering heavy losses from investments in real estate and other sectors. Its parent company, Zhongzhi Enterprise Group, also went bankrupt in late 2023.
Zhongrong defaulted on about 250 billion yuan (roughly $35 billion) in trust products, affecting over 30,000 individuals and 2,000 institutions.
State-appointed custodians declared Zhongrong insolvent and proposed winding up the company, meaning it will be liquidated and investors are unlikely to recover much of their money.
Why did Zhongrong trust collapse?
The main cause was the crisis in China’s property sector. Developers, who relied heavily on trust company funding, began defaulting on their debts after the government imposed stricter rules on borrowing and the property market slumped.
As property values fell and developers failed to repay loans, trust companies like Zhongrong were left with huge losses. The government has made it clear it will not bail out wealthy investors, breaking with past practice where implicit guarantees were often assumed.
Its impact has been broader than earlier anticipated
Over 162 high-yield trust products have defaulted in 2024 alone, and more than 600 billion yuan in trust assets are at risk. The collapse has shattered confidence among China’s wealthy, many of whom now face significant losses and are cutting back on spending.
The government is tightening regulations, banning trust firms from offering implicit guarantees and raising capital requirements. There is a risk of a “chain reaction” in the shadow banking sector, but so far, this has not led to a broader financial crisis.
Why does this matter for China’s economy?
The trust sector’s troubles undermine confidence among China’s wealthiest consumers, which could hurt the government’s efforts to boost domestic spending and revive economic growth.
The property downturn and shadow banking crisis add to the challenges facing China’s economy, which is already struggling with slow growth and a trade war with the US.
With the US-China trade tension escalating against the backdrop of President Donald Trump’s tariff blitz, which has disrupted China’s manufacturing sector and supply chains.
Is it China’s Lehman moment?
The Lehman moment is a reference to the collapse of the Lehman Brothers firm in the US that signalled the 2008 meltdown in America which spread world over quickly. Some analysts have compared the collapse of Zhongrong International Trust and China’s broader shadow banking troubles to the Lehman Brothers collapse because both represent major financial institutions failing under risky lending and investment practices, triggering fears of wider economic fallout. Zhongrong’s insolvency, involving $35 billion in defaults and over 600 billion yuan in at-risk assets, echoes Lehman’s role as a large, interconnected player whose failure exposed systemic vulnerabilities.
However, experts note key differences. China’s government is not only secretive but also more selective and cautious, avoiding blanket bailouts and instead pushing for restructuring and risk containment, unlike the US’s broad interventions in 2008.
The Chinese financial system is largely state-owned and controlled, giving regulators more tools to manage defaults and monitor risks. The property crisis in China, while severe, is seen as a “gray rhino” (an obvious threat) rather than a sudden “black swan” event like Lehman’s collapse.
Is this really China’s Lehman moment? It is a significant financial shock exposing deep problems in shadow banking and property lending, shaking investor confidence and threatening economic growth. Yet, many analysts argue it is not a direct parallel to Lehman’s collapse because China’s authorities are managing the fallout differently and the financial system’s structure is distinct. The situation remains tense and uncertain, but so far it is more a slow-motion crisis than a sudden systemic meltdown.