Embattled Evergrande warns of growing default risks as
pressures mount
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[September 14, 2021] By
Clare Jim and Samuel Shen
HONG KONG/SHANGHAI (Reuters) -Cash-strapped
property group China Evergrande Group said on Tuesday it has engaged
advisers to examine its financial options and warned of default risks
amid plunging property sales, sending its stock and bond prices sharply
lower.
The real estate giant has been scrambling to raise funds it needs to pay
lenders and suppliers, with regulators and financial markets worried
that any crisis could ripple through China's banking system and
potentially trigger wider social unrest.
In the latest development, Evergrande said two of its subsidiaries had
failed to uphold guarantee obligations for 934 million yuan ($145
million) worth of wealth management products issued by third parties.
That could "lead to cross-default", which would "would have a material
adverse effect on the group's business, prospects, financial condition
and results of operations," it said in a statement to the Hong Kong
stock exchange, without providing further details on the products.
The company's shares slumped to a six-year low in Hong Kong on Tuesday
and the Shanghai bourse halted trading of its listed bonds amid wild
swings in its price.
Evergrande said it has appointed Houlihan Lokey and Admiralty Harbour
Capital as joint financial advisers, the clearest indication yet that it
is looking at restructuring options, analysts say.
The two firms will assess the group's capital structure, evaluate its
liquidity, explore solutions to ease the current liquidity stress and
reach an optimal solution for all stakeholders as soon as possible.
"Evergrande's announcement flags the first step of a restructuring,
which usually involves either delay in interest payment, no interest
payment or delay together with haircuts," said James Shi, distressed
debt analyst at credit analytics provider Reorg.
He added liquidation would only happen if the restructuring failed.
Evergrande late on Monday said online speculation about bankruptcy and
restructuring was "totally untrue".
That came despite growing markets expectation that Evergrande may need
to restructure, after China ruled in August that various lawsuits
against the developer would be centrally handled in Guangzhou.
Evergrande said it is talking to potential investors to sell some of its
assets, but has made no "material progress" so far.
The company said earlier this month that it was in talks to sell certain
assets, including stakes in Hong Kong-listed units Evergrande New Energy
Vehicle and Evergrande Property Services.
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People gather to demand repayment of loans and financial products at
the Evergrande's headquarters, in Shenzhen, Guangdong province,
China September 13, 2021. REUTERS/David Kirton
Pressure on Evergrande - which has 1.97 trillion yuan ($305 billion) in
liabilities - has intensified in recent weeks as fears over its ability to repay
investors triggered protests that are certain to rattle Beijing.
The company blamed "ongoing negative media reports" for dampening investor
confidence, resulting in a further decline in sales in September.
WIDER IMPACT
Shares of the company fell over 10% on Tuesday morning to their lowest since
December 2014. Its listed e-vehicle spinoff plunged over 23% and shares of its
property management unit dropped 8%.
In the debt market, Evergrande's June 2025 dollar bonds fell nearly 6 cents on
Tuesday late morning to 27 cents, yielding 58.45%, according to financial data
provider Duration Finance.
Moves in the company's highly illiquid onshore bonds were more erratic, with one
Shanghai exchange-traded bond surging nearly 23% and triggering a trading halt,
while another in Shenzhen dived almost 12%.
Reorg's Shi said there may be fresh bond selling if Evergrande defaults, but the
market spillover would be limited because the risks have mostly been largely
priced in.
The bigger risks are likely to be social, he added.
Angry investors gathered near Evergrande's headquarters in the southern Chinese
city of Shenzhen on Monday to demand the firm repay loans and financial
products.
The developer's struggles to quickly sell off assets and avert defaults on its
massive liabilities are raising the risk of contagion for other privately-owned
developers, fund managers and analysts say.
In a statement on Monday, it said it was facing "unprecedented difficulties" but
would do everything possible to resume work and protect the legitimate rights
and interests of its customers.
The company's debt has been repeatedly downgraded by ratings agencies targeting
the developer over its struggles to restructure huge debts.
($1 = 6.4511 Chinese yuan)
(Additional reporting by Miyoung Kim and Andrew Galbraith; Editing by Shri
Navaratnam and Sam Holmes)
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