Christopher Balding, Columnist

China's Bailouts Won't End With Anbang

Stability remains Beijing's primary concern.

Sign of the times.

Photographer: Giulia Marchi/Bloomberg

When the China Insurance Regulatory Commission announced last week that it was seizing Anbang Insurance Group Co., the only surprise was that it took so long. Last year, the company was told to sell its overseas assets, its founder was placed behind bars, and banks were ordered to stop offering its products. So what, if anything, does this latest incident tell us about China's economy and its attempt to crack down on debt?

Anbang is often referred to as an insurance company, but this is misleading. Although the company does offer some run-of-the-mill products, such as property and casualty insurance, what really drove its growth were unusually structured life-insurance products. At the end of 2016, shortly before regulators intervened, property and casualty premiums made up a mere 4 percent of the group's revenue. Life insurance made up 96 percent.