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Analysis | How the magic went out of Huishan’s financial wizardry

Whenever a bank’s interest is tied to the share price of its debtor, the options become very limited for all concerned

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Holstein cows on a farm. Huishan Dairy is China’s largest operator of dairy farms, with as many as 200,000 dairy cattle.Photo: AFP

Pop! Another bubble fuelled by greed and leverage, with Chinese characteristics, has burst.

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The only difference is the one drowning here is Yang Kai, who until recently was atop the food chain, playing rescuer to those kicking to stay above the water.

Like most of the “victims,” Yang thinks big. Before last Friday’s 85 per cent dive in the price of China Huishan Dairy, Yang was on his way to becoming a financial guru.

He lent money and his name to small companies. He built apartments and offices in China. He bought a stake in Hong Kong Life Insurance.

All of these were built on generous loans offered by mainland banks. The wizardry here is apparently not Huishan’s slumping dairy business, but the company’s listing status and share price performance.

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Shedding light on this operation are some Central Clearing And Settlement System (CCASS) records showing how Yang has been pledging his shares for money to support Huishan’s share price.

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