CHINA
MARKETS
Evergrande to sell $1.5 billion stake in Chinese
bank, as it faces another bond interest payment
PUBLISHED
TUE, SEP 28 202110:50 PM EDTUPDATED 3 HOURS AGO
Weizhen Tan
@WEIZENT
Ahead of
another interest payment deadline, Chinese developer Evergrande announced it
will be selling off a $1.5 billion (9.99 billion yuan) stake in Shengjing Bank
to a state-owned asset management firm.
The property
giant, which is buckling under the weight of more than $300 billion in debt,
has been struggling to raise funds as it faces a $47.5 million bond interest
payment deadline on Wednesday. The embattled real estate giant also owes
payments to banks and suppliers.
In a filing
to the Hong Kong exchange on Wednesday morning, Evergrande said that it has
entered an agreement to sell the 1.75 billion shares it owns in Shengjing Bank
to the Shenyang Shengjing Finance Investment Group, at 5.70 yuan per share. Those
shares amount to 19.93% of the issued share capital of the bank.
Evergrande
had earlier already disposed of 1 billion yuan worth of shares in Shengjing
Bank.
In the
statement, Evergrande said that its liquidity problems have already “adversely
affected” Shengjing Bank “in a material way.” Introducing the purchaser – the
state-owned Shenyang Shengjing Finance Investment Group – will “stabilise the
operations” of the bank, Evergrande said.
In a bid to
ease its cash crunch, Evergrande is making ongoing efforts to sell off stakes
in other assets.
It has sold
property units to suppliers and contractors to offset some of its outstanding
payments. As of Aug. 27, those outstanding debts amounted to around 25.17
billion yuan ($3.8 billion), according to Evergrande’s latest financial
statement.
Evergrande’s
shares in Hong Kong jumped nearly 10% in early trading on Wednesday morning.
Another bond interest payment due Wednesday
The
troubles of Evergrande came to the fore after it warned twice in September that
it may default on its debts. Fears over whether the firm would default roiled
global markets – although U.S. stocks rebounded by the end of last week.
The world’s
most indebted real estate company already missed one key $83.5 million coupon
payment last week, on an offshore March 2022, $2 billion 5-year bond. Dollar
bonds are typically held by foreign investors.
Evergrande
has remained silent on the payment due last week, with no announcement made
thus far.
However,
the company will not technically default unless it fails to make that payment
within 30 days of the due date.
Markets are
closely watching to see if the firm will meet its next interest payment of
$47.5 million due Wednesday for a $1 billion dollar bond that will mature in
March 2024.
With
investors exiting Evergrande bonds and as prices tumble, yields on this 7-year
bond have shot up to 90%, from just around 14% in the beginning of this year.
Yields move in the opposite direction from prices.
For the
rest of the year, Evergrande has interest payments due each month in October,
November and December.
Analysts
have said the firm may prioritize domestic investors, who are the main holders
of onshore bonds – over foreign investors, who mostly hold the offshore debt.
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