Country Garden restructuring fears deepen China property concerns
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[August 11, 2023] By
Clare Jim
HONG KONG (Reuters) -Country Garden's shares hit a record low on Friday
on fears that the Chinese property company is preparing for a debt
restructuring, adding to concerns about the property sector outlook in
the absence of stronger support from Beijing.
The country's top private property developer, which had total
liabilities of about $194 billion at the end of 2022, is expected to
kick off a restructuring process soon, Chinese news outlet Yicai said,
citing an unnamed financial source.
Country Garden would be the latest to join a growing list of developers
to kick-start a debt restructuring process - others including China
Evergrande Group and Sunac China Holdings have already proposed such
terms.
The sell-off in Country Garden's bonds and shares also came after the
developer warned on Thursday it could report a loss of up to $7.6
billion for the first half and apologised to investors for misjudging
market conditions.
Once considered one of the more financially sound developers, Country
Garden's woes could have a chilling effect on homebuyers and financial
institutions, further squeezing a sector that has already seen plunging
sales, tight liquidity and a series of developer defaults since late
2021.
China's politburo, a top decision-making body of the ruling Communist
Party, pledged in July to adjust property policies in a timely manner,
fuelling speculation stimulus was on the way for a sector that accounts
for a quarter of its economy.
But no major moves have been made by the top regulators to date.
China's securities regulator held a meeting on Friday with some
developers and discussed their sales and debt situation, financial news
website Cailianshe reported, citing people familiar with the matter.
The regulator also asked the property developers about their financing
needs and sought suggestions, according to Cailianshe.
Analysts say Country Garden's $22 million of missed coupon payments this
week could help prod regulators into rolling out stronger aid measures,
but they had little faith such steps would turn the sector around any
time soon.
Country Garden has a 30-day grace period for missed payments. It also
has other near-term repayment obligations. In September alone, the
developer may need to repay more than 9 billion yuan ($1.25 billion)
worth of onshore bonds.
The company does not have enough cash to meet the payments due so it
might ask creditors for an extension to ensure liquidity for home
construction, media outlet Caixin reported on Thursday evening, citing
unnamed people close to the company.
China International Capital Corporation (CICC) has been hired as a
financial adviser to Country Garden, the Yicai and Caixin reports said.
Country Garden declined to comment. CICC did not respond to a request
for comment.
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The company logo of Chinese developer
Country Garden is pictured at the Shanghai Country Garden Center in
Shanghai, China August 9, 2023. REUTERS/Aly Song/File Photo
Country Garden shares ended down 5.8% on Friday, having fallen as
much as 14.4% during the day to a record low of HK$0.89. Most of its
dollar bonds traded at a record low below 7 cents on the dollar.
Moody's, which downgraded Country Garden's corporate family rating
by three notches to Caa1 from B1 on Thursday, said on Friday the
company's credit distress is likely to spill over to the country's
property and financial markets.
"It is likely to further weaken market sentiment and delay the
recovery of China's property sector," it said.
DEBT RESTRUCTURING
On Thursday, Country Garden forecast a net loss of up to 55 billion
yuan ($7.6 billion) for the first half compared with a 1.9 billion
yuan net profit a year ago, citing a drop in gross margin and an
increase in inventory impairments.
"We think the profit warning is not a surprise to the market
...however, the read-across from the inventory impairment and the
recent property price decline is negative to other developers,
including state-owned developers," UBS analyst John Lam said in a
research note.
In a filing, Country Garden apologised for its inability to properly
forecast the depth and intensity of China's property downturn or to
take earlier countermeasures.
"The understanding of potential risks such as excessive investment
proportion in third-and fourth-tier and even lower-tier cities
...were insufficient," it added.
The company on Friday posted a letter of apology in its social
media, saying it felt guilty for not having done well enough. It
said it would put full effort into home completion, resolving
liquidity pressure and ensuring operations.
Among other restructurings in the sector, smaller peer China Aoyuan
Group said on Thursday holders of 75.9% of its offshore note
principals supported its restructuring terms, passing the 75%
threshold required.
Fantasia Holdings, the first developer to announce a debt
restructuring during the current crisis, resumed trading on Friday
after a 16-month halt, with its shares dropping 60% after it
released long-overdue financial results.
($1 = 7.8168 Hong Kong dollars)
($1 = 7.2289 Chinese yuan renminbi)
(Reporting by Clare Jim; Additional reporting by Selena Li, Editing
by Himani Sarkar, Jamie Freed, Raju Gopalakrishnan and Jane
Merriman)
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