China's home de-stocking push to bring developers little cheer
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[June 10, 2024] By
Clare Jim and Ziyi Tang
HONG KONG/BEIJING (Reuters) - China's efforts to clear massive inventory
by turning unsold homes into affordable housing are unlikely to help
cash-strapped developers due to the program's limited size and
potentially low prices, analysts and developers say.
As part of a support package for the crisis-hit property sector, Beijing
announced last month a plan for a 300 billion yuan ($41 billion) lending
facility, which could result in 500 billion worth of bank financing for
local state-owned enterprises (SOEs) to purchase completed and unsold
homes.
Chinese banks are expected to extend cheaper loans to SOEs via the
facility, backed by the central bank, to help them buy the homes from
developers at "reasonable prices" to turn into affordable housing.
Some private developers, however, see very few, if any, of their
projects being selected as the lending facility is inadequate and the
scheme is only expected to launch in bigger cities where affordable
housing is available. Price offers from SOEs are also likely to be low,
they say.
The cautious attitude of developers could be a challenge for Beijing, as
waves of support measures over the past two years fail to revive the
sector, which at its peak accounted for a quarter of GDP and remains a
major drag on the economy.
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Xintangzhen, a town in Guangzhou, issued a notice on May 30, the first
local government to do so after the support package, to purchase
"suitable housing stock" for resettlement housing.
The local government would buy the homes at cost price, reported China
Real Estate Business, a media outlet managed by the housing authority,
citing the notice.
A project co-owned by state-owned Jinmao and major developer Vanke had
applied, the news report added.
Some developers said buying at costs, which means a 20-30% discount to
market price, was better than expected.
A senior executive at a private developer in default said his firm would
be interested to apply if other cities make similar offers as
Xintangzhen, but he expects offers to be low and insufficient to cover
construction loans.
"If it's not even enough to cover the development loan, how do we repay
the loan? The lending bank would not agree either," said a senior
official at a Shanghai-based developer, who declined to be identified
due to the sensitivity of the matter.
Analysts at Citi and Bank of America have, however, said discounts of
50% in prices are needed to ensure modest returns for the SOEs, as
affordable homes typically sell at 10-50% discounts to private homes.
Even if developers are able to profit from selling completed apartments
to the SOEs, local governments may require proceeds be used to finish
existing projects rather than to repay debt.
"This will not help us as a listed company, or our offshore debt
repayment," said an executive at another developer in credit default.
Gavekal Dragonomics estimates that at average market prices, 500 billion
yuan in purchases would pay for 12% of housing inventories, or 20% if
bought at a discount.
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A drone view of an under-construction residential development by
Country Garden in Shanghai, China February 29, 2024. REUTERS/Xihao
Jiang/File Photo
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S&P said that converting existing inventory into social housing
would also increase transactions at the low-end and bring down
overall prices.
China's housing ministry, central bank, the top banking regulator
and local housing authority in Guangzhou did not respond to requests
for comment. Jinmao did not respond to a request for comment and
Vanke declined to comment.
EXECUTION RISK
"Only a handful of distressed developers will benefit," said S&P
Global Ratings credit analyst Esther Liu. "(Completing construction)
is the problem the distressed developers are facing. They don't have
a lot of completed inventory."
While developers await clarity on SOE demand and price offers, some
bankers say the affordable housing scheme could lead to a
deterioration in asset quality as SOEs would struggle to generate
sufficient profits to repay bank loans.
Banks can borrow from the 300 billion re-lending facility at 1.75%
interest to finance 60% of the loans they offer to SOEs.
In aggregate, analysts estimate, that SOEs would have to pay around
2.5% interest for these loans, similar to average rental yields in
China.
"This is good for the property sector but bad for the SOEs and the
banks, because essentially you're shifting some risk to them," said
the first executive, who declined to be named as he is not
authorized to speak to the media.
To be sure, banks and local governments are risk averse.
The central bank in February last year rolled out a 100 billion yuan
re-lending program for local governments in eight cities to purchase
home inventories - only 2 billion of which has been utilized as of
end-March 2024.
"We see high execution risk given banks and local SOEs have to fully
bear the credit and investment risks," said Zerlina Zeng, senior
credit analyst at CreditSights.
The central government's support though has drawn more visitors to
top-tier cities following the latest stimulus package that includes
lowering down payment and removal of mortgage rate floors, analysts
and developers say.
"The central government has stepped up (support); the turning point
is the important change here," said Bank of America head of Greater
China property research Karl Choi.
($1 = 7.2455 Chinese yuan)
(Reporting by Clare Jim in Hong Kong and Ziyi Tang in Beijing;
Editing by Sumeet Chatterjee and Jacqueline Wong)
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