Corstone Capital Purchases $260 Million Non-Performing Loan Portfolio from China Huarong Asset Management Corporation.BEIJING & WASHINGTON -- Corstone Capital (Corstone) today announced a closing on the purchase of a portfolio of non-performing loans (NPLs) totaling over 2 Billion RMB RMB Right Mouse Button RMB Regional Management Board (USACE) RMB Rolf Maier Bode (musician, band) RMB Ren Min Bi (currency of People's Republic of China) (US $260 Million) in the Peoples Republic of China. This is Corstone's third purchase of an NPL 1. NPL - New Programming Language. IBM's original (temporary) name for PL/I, changed due to conflict with England's "National Physical Laboratory." MPL and MPPL were considered before settling on PL/I. Sammet 1969, p.542. 2. portfolio and its first purchase from China Huarong Asset Management Corporation. The latest transaction increases Corstone's interests in Chinese NPLs to over US $1.2 Billion. Albert "Bud" Hawk, Chairman and Managing Partner, stated, "We are pleased to surpass the US $1 Billion milestone. This transaction underscores our strong commitment to China and provides another opportunity for us to increase our role and leadership in the Chinese NPL market as it continues to develop and grow." Michael D. Helmicki, General Partner, commented, "We are excited by the continued expansion of Corstone's investment in China's distressed debt distressed debt Debt with low junk status and a market price substantially below par value, often pennies on the dollar. Investors sometimes buy distressed debt on the possibility that management can renegotiate loan agreements and keep the issuer out of market. Our on the ground network and experience are allowing us to build a substantial competitive advantage in managing the life-cycle of these investments, from acquisition to disposal and recovery. Corstone continues to be bullish on the China NPL market, where we see great growth potential in the years to come." Goodmorning Shinhan Securities and Shinhan Bank This article or section has multiple issues: * Its neutrality is disputed. * It reads like an advertisement and needs to be rewritten in a neutral point of view. * It may require general cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. were co-investors in the syndicated transaction. Both firms are members of Shinhan Financial Group Shinhan Financial Group is a South Korean financial services group. Shinhan Bank and CHB Bank, two of its largest holdings, are set to merge operations in 2006. The group's other notable holding is 62.42% stake in Jeju Bank. It is 8. (NYSE NYSE See: New York Stock Exchange : SHG SHG Second Harmonic Generation SHG Short-Handed Goals (hockey) SHG Self Help Group SHG State History Guide (formerly State House Girls) SHG Sacred Heart Griffin ), an internationally recognized financial services The examples and perspective in this article or section may not represent a worldwide view of the subject. Please [ improve this article] or discuss the issue on the talk page. firm with experience in the international NPL market. Corstone has selected a local collection agent to service the assets. According to Ulysses G. Auger, II, Managing Partner, "Using a local Beijing servicer allows us to leverage the strengths and expertise of our internal collections platform to further our competitive advantage in the China market. With our additional capacity, we have the ability and scale to service NPLs in all of the key markets that Corstone had targeted through 2006." China Huarong Asset Management Company was formed in 1999 as an independent legal entity and a wholly state-owned financial institution. It is the largest of the asset management companies established by the Chinese government to purchase, manage, and resolve the NPLs accumulated under a planned economy system by the state-owned commercial banks. Corstone Capital is a private international investment firm focusing primarily on NPL assets, real estate-related assets, and operating companies in Asia. Corstone is headquartered in Washington, DC and has correspondent offices in Singapore, Beijing, Shanghai, Nanchang, and Seoul. |
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