Dalian Wanda amends Sunac
property deal after China curbs funding
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[July 19, 2017]
By Shu Zhang and Matthew Miller
BEIJING (Reuters) - Chinese commercial
property conglomerate Dalian Wanda Group altered a deal with Sunac China
announced a week ago, after banks scrutinized their credit risk, by
bringing in another developer Guangzhou R&F Properties.
In a joint announcement, Wanda said it would sell 77 hotels in China to
Guangzhou R&F Properties for 19.9 billion yuan ($2.95 billion), and a
total of 91 percent equity in 13 tourism projects to Sunac China
<1918.HK> for 43.8 billion yuan.
Chinese banks have been told to stop providing funding for several of
Wanda's overseas acquisitions as Beijing tries to curb the
conglomerate's offshore buying spree, sources familiar with the matter
said on Monday.
Sunac Chairman Sun Hongbin also confirmed to local media that banks had
started reviewing the company after its deal with Wanda, and the company
was in communication with the lenders.
The total price of the updated deal is around the same at 63.7 billion
yuan, still the second-largest deal ever in China's real estate
industry. Under the original deal Wanda would have sold to Sunac 76
hotels for 33.6 billion yuan and the stake in the tourism projects for
29.58 billion yuan.
"All three parties are winners," Wanda Chairman Wang Jianlin told a
press conference. "Wanda is definitely a winner, through this transfer,
(we will) lower debt significantly, and collect a large amount of cash."
He said that after the deal, Wanda's property unit Wanda Commercial's
debt would drop to 200 billion yuan from 400 billion last year, and its
cash would increase to 170 billion yuan from 100 billion yuan.
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Chairman of Dalian Wanda Group Wang Jianlin, Chairman of Sunac China
Holdings Ltd. Sun Hongbin and Chairman of R&F Properties Li Silian
attend a strategic cooperation signing ceremony in Beijing, China
July 19, 2017. REUTERS/Jason Lee
Sunac will also no longer borrow 29.6 billion yuan from Wanda to fund the deal,
and it will take over a total of 45.4 billion yuan in loans held by the tourism
projects.
Sunac's Sun said the adjusted deal would help the company's liquidity and lower
its debt level, adding the firm had "ample" cash flow with 90 billion yuan of
cash on hand.
The Tianjin-based developer's net gearing could have surged to over 400 percent
under the original deal, analysts have said.
R&F, which now owns 24 hotels around the world, said the deal would help boost
returns for its hotel business.
"Both Sunac and Wanda were under capital pressure, the adjusted terms will
benefit both," CRIC analyst David Hong in Hong Kong said.
(Writing by Clare Jim; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman and Susan Thomas)
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