Chinese developer Shimao defaults on trust loan - letter
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[January 06, 2022]SHANGHAI/HONG
KONG (Reuters) -Chinese developer Shimao Group has defaulted on a loan
after missing a 645 million yuan ($101 million) payment, the lender said
in a letter seen by Reuters on Thursday, in the latest sign of distress
in China's property sector.
China Credit Trust Co said in the letter, confirmed by two sources
familiar with the matter, that 755 million yuan of the trust loan had
been repaid. However, the absence of the remaining payment meant the
loan was now in default, it added in the letter to investors in the
loan.
Shimao and China Credit Trust Co did not respond to requests for
comment.
Separately, smaller rival Guangzhou R&F Properties said it did not have
sufficient funds to buy back a $725 million bond as sales of its assets
had not come through as planned.
Chinese developers are facing an unprecedented liquidity squeeze due to
years of regulatory curbs on borrowing, causing a string of offshore
debt defaults, credit-rating downgrades and sell-offs in developers'
shares and bonds.
The offshore default last month of China Evergrande Group, the world's
most indebted developer with more than $300 billion in liabilities, has
exacerbated a debt crisis looming over the world's second-largest
economy.
Shimao had already seen sharp falls in its shares and debt in December,
triggered by worries over an asset sale and cancelled apartment deals.
For R&F, it said in a filing late on Wednesday that the funds available
to settle its tender offer for an offshore bond were materially less
than the $300 million it previously expected, due to continued
volatility in the property sector.
Last month, R&F proposed two tender offer options to bondholders of the
5.75% notes, while seeking their consent to extend by six months the
maturity of the bond due Jan. 13.
The options were buying back the notes at a 17% discount, or $830 for
every $1,000 in principal; or buying back at most half of bondholders'
notes in full, both with accrued interest.
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The logo of Guangzhou-based property developer R&F Properties is
pictured at a strategic cooperation signing ceremony in Beijing,
China July 19, 2017. REUTERS/Jason Lee
R&F said in the filing that 71.7% of the bondholders had tendered for the first
option and 24.2% for the second - but it added that it expected to have
"materially less" than the $300 million previously anticipated to buy back the
bonds.
"Proceeds from certain asset sales contemplated by the group may fail to
materialise by the settlement date," it said, adding the settlement date has
been postponed by two days to around Jan. 12.
In the document last month, R&F said it would accept tendered notes on a pro
rata basis, and any notes not accepted for purchase would be returned to the
bondholders. Holders that tendered would also be deemed to have approved the
maturity extension.
As of 0935 GMT, the bond was trading at 56.5 cents on the dollar, down from 66.5
overnight, according to data from Duration Finance. R&F's other international
bonds also fell.
Shimao's bond due July 2022 plunged to 47.625 from 70.6.
Onshore, most of the yuan bonds of the two developers also tumbled, with a
Shimao bond due Sept 2022 tumbling 11%.
Shares of Shimao listed in Hong Kong closed down 5.2%. R&F shares gained 2.3%.
($1 = 6.3753 Chinese yuan renminbi)
(Reporting by Jason Xue, Steven Bian and Ma Rong in Shanghai, Clare Jim in Hong
KongEditing by Jacqueline Wong and Mark Potter)
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