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China's bad debt managers risk becoming bad credits themselves

* Liquidity squeeze hurting funds that invested in NPLs

* Prices for bad loan portfolios weakening amid glut of supply

* Profits at Chinese state and private funds under pressure

* Foreigners see opportunity in slowing economy, weaker local rivals

* GRAPHIC-China bad loans:https://tmsnrt.rs/2BtQn6k (Adds editing credit)

By Samuel Shen and Shu Zhang

SHANGHAI/SINGAPORE, Feb 14 (Reuters) - China's bad debt managers, whom Beijing hopes to play a key role in resolving financial risks, are in danger of becoming bad credits themselves as the leverage crackdown that fuelled a boom in their business now threatens their own access to funding.

The practice of buying banks' non-performing loans (NPLs) at a discount and recovering them for a profit has grown rapidly in China since 2016.

It has attracted a slew of new local players as well as foreigners including Oaktree Capital Group and CarVal Investors as Beijing's deleveraging campaign and economic restructuring produces a still-rising mountain of soured loans.

But as China's economy posts its slowest annual growth in 28 years amid the Sino-U.S. trade war, Chinese vulture funds are finding themselves mired in their own liquidity squeeze.

The industry's woes not only hamper Chinese banks' ability to quickly offload bad debts to make room for fresh lending, but also increase financial risks in the system and threaten social stability as tens of thousands of retail investors lose their savings in vulture fund investments.

Prices for bad loan portfolios have weakened amid a fresh avalanche of supply, dashing fund managers' hopes for a quick turnaround of their assets.

"In the past, domestic bad loan investors borrowed a significant sum of money to buy portfolios but they're not able to borrow any more," said Ted Osborn, partner at PwC.

The deterioration in distressed asset prices is hitting the books of dozens of listed companies who rushed into the business a few years back.

Even state-owned bad debt specialists - referred to as AMCs - are suffering.

China Huarong Asset Management, the country's largest AMC, reported a 61 percent decline in pretax profit generated by its NPL business in the first half of last year. Rival China Cinda Asset Management expects its 2018 profit to fall 30 percent, its first profit decline since its 2013 listing.

DISILLUSIONMENT

Bad loan manager Zhejiang Dongrong Equity Investment Co is a case in point. It began defaulting on a series of bad loan investment products last August and is now offering goods including rice, milk and ham in part payment to pacify disgruntled investors.