Exclusive-Kaisa offshore creditors offer $2 billion to take over stalled
projects - sources
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[September 19, 2022]
By Clare Jim
HONG KONG (Reuters) - An offshore
bondholders' group of cash-strapped Kaisa is offering up to $2 billion
to acquire stalled housing projects of the Shenzhen-based developer to
facilitate their completion, two people with direct knowledge of the
matter said.
The takeover talks are in early stages, according to the people, who
declined to be named as they were not authorised to speak to the media
on this subject.
If successful, it would be the first foreign investor takeover of
Chinese developers' distressed residential assets in the latest wave of
crises to hit the property sector over the past year. It also comes as
authorities are scrambling to contain a mortgage boycott by homebuyers
against stalled projects.
Kaisa Group, the second-largest U.S. dollar bond issuer among Chinese
developers after China Evergrande Group, is in the process of
restructuring its $12 billion offshore debt after defaulting on some
bonds last year.
It is also struggling to repay its debt onshore and tap capital to
complete its projects.
The offshore bondholder group, which is being represented by financial
advisory group Lazard Ltd, made the offer to acquire Kaisa's stalled
projects to the developer's advisor CITIC Securities, said the people.
The offshore bondholder group aims to offer up to $2 billion to buy some
non-performing loans from Kaisa's lenders, tied to unfinished housing
projects, at a 20%-25% discount and provide the financing needed to
complete the projects, they added.
The terms offered by the offshore creditors' group are similar to those
previously extended by Chinese asset managers when buying the distressed
assets of some developers in the country, the people said.
Kaisa declined to comment. Lazard and CITIC did not respond to request
for comment.
As most of Kaisa's projects are in top-tier Chinese cities, where
housing prices are relatively resilient, bondholders expect to reap the
profits after the completion of the stalled projects, said the two
people.
They have also offered to split profits with Kaisa after certain
returns, while the extra liquidity recouped could help the developer's
business and operations, which would also be beneficial for its debt
restructuring, they added.
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A sign of the Kaisa Holdings Group is
seen at the Shanghai Kaisa Financial Centre, in Shanghai, China,
December 7, 2021. REUTERS/Aly Song
FINANCING OPTIONS
Evergrande and Kaisa have been at the centre of a stifling cash
squeeze in the Chinese property sector, which accounts for a quarter
of the economy and which has lurched from one crisis to another in
the past year, roiling global and local markets.
A string of developers, including Evergrande and Kaisa, have
defaulted on billions of dollars worth of dollar bond obligations
since the second half of last year, forcing bondholders to enter
into long and cumbersome debt restructuring processes.
It is unclear how many stalled projects would be covered by the
bondholder group's offer, and how many of them meet the purchase
criteria laid out by the group.
The group proposed that, among other criteria, the projects must be
located in first or second tier cities, have no off-balance sheet
loans and own permit to pre-sale.
With a view to help revive onshore projects and advance the offshore
restructuring talks, the bondholders' group has also offered to take
a 20% haircut on Kaisa's dollar notes and inject equity capital,
said the two people and two other sources.
Under the proposal, Kaisa would raise $550-$700 million by issuing
new shares, the two people with direct knowledge of the matter said.
While that would dilute Kaisa Chairman Kwok Ying Shing's stake in
the company, there would be a provision for him to raise his
shareholding again, they added.
To revitalise its projects and improve short-term liquidity, Kaisa
said in April it had entered into strategic co-operation agreements
with state-owned China Merchants Shekou Industrial Zone Holdings and
China Great Wall Asset Management.
A person close to Kaisa had said at the time the agreements with
state-owned companies were expected to help restore homebuyer and
regulatory confidence in the embattled developer.
(Reporting by Clare Jim; Editing by Sumeet Chatterjee and Ana
Nicolaci da Costa)
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