CHINA
Evergrande’s bankruptcy still just a matter of
time
S&P Global Ratings says developer’s default is
‘highly likely’ when $3.5 billion in debt comes due in March and April 2022
By JEFF PAO
NOVEMBER
23, 2021
https://asiatimes.com/2021/11/evergrandes-bankruptcy-still-just-a-matter-of-time/
The
potential for China’s Evergrande Group to finally go bankrupt is still high
despite recent progress made in selling assets and paying down debts, analysts
and commentators say.
The
Shenzhen-based property developer saw its contracted sales collapse by about
90% year-on-year in September and October, the traditional high sales season
for Chinese property markets.
The company
also suffered from a property market down cycle where 21 lower-tier cities,
where most of Evergrande’s property projects are situated, announced
market-intervening measures last month to limit price reductions. Those caps
are reportedly contributing to Evergrande’s cash-flow problems by reducing its
ability to slash prices to facilitate sales.
At the same
time, a 2.8 billion Evergrande share stake worth about US$1 billion, appeared
in Hong Kong’s Central Clearing and Settlement System (CCASS) last Friday,
indicating that company chairman Hui Ka-yan may be pledging part of his stake
as collateral for loans, media reported. The stake was reported to CCASS by
Haitong International Securities Co.
Hui and his
wife own more than 76.69% of Evergrande’s outstanding shares. On October 8,
Hui, through Xin Xin (BVI) Limited, pledged 500 million Evergrande shares to a
third party by “providing share rights as a guarantee to persons other than
qualified lenders.” On October 12, Haitong’s CCASS holdings in Evergrande
increased by 500 million shares.
Evergrande
has faced a liquidity shortage since its plan to go public in Shanghai was scrapped
last year. Chinese financial regulators also announced “three red lines” to
forbid heavily indebted property developers from borrowing money from banks
until they lower their gearing ratios.
With
worse-than-expected contract sales in the first half, Evergrande failed to pay
for the construction of many of its real estate projects. The suspension of
construction sent Evergrande into a vicious cycle in which the company could
not generate revenue to pay creditors and holders of its wealth management products.
Between
September 23 and October 11, Evergrande failed to pay interest of $276.5
million to global investors who hold its bonds. The company finally made
payments by the end of the 30-day grace period to avoid an immediate default.
It was reported that Hui settled the payments with his own funds.
Evergrande
will be removed from the Hang Seng China Enterprises Index (HSCEI) from
December 6, according to a statement released by the Hang Seng Indexes Co Ltd,
a wholly-owned subsidiary of Hang Seng Bank, last Friday.
On November
17, Evergrande’s weighting in the HSCEI was only 0.07%, compared with Meituan’s
9.41%, Tencent’s 8.47% and Alibaba’s 7.98%. Evergrande’s shares fell 1.08% at
HK$2.75 on Monday. They are down 83% from HK$16.28 a year ago.
Meanwhile,
credit rating agencies continue to issue warnings. S&P Global Ratings said
in a recent research report that Evergrande’s debt crisis had not yet ended and
that the bigger test would come when $3.5 billion comes due for US
dollar-denominated notes in March and April next year.
“We still
believe an Evergrande default is highly likely,” said analysts at S&P
Global Ratings. “The firm has lost the capacity to sell new homes, which means
its main business model is effectively defunct. This makes full repayment of
its debts unlikely.”
On
September 3, Evergrande said its contracted sales decreased 26% to 38.08
billion yuan ($4.89 billion) in August from a year ago. It said its August
sales included amounts offset through the sales of property units to suppliers
and contractors.
In the
first eight months of this year, the company’s contracted sales fell 2.7% to
438.65 billion yuan from the same period in 2020.
Although
the company did not announce its contracted sales in September and October, it
could have only generated revenue of 17 billion yuan in September and 2.9
billion yuan in October from property sales, according to China Index Academy,
a Beijing-based real estate data provider. The combined revenue in the two
months was down 89% from the same period of 2020.
Last month,
Evergrande tried to replenish its foreign exchange by offering to sell its Hong
Kong headquarters building in Wan Chai district to Chinese state-owned Yuexiu
Property for $1.7 billion. But Yuexiu Property pulled out of the deal, fearing
that Evergrande’s debt problems would undermine the transaction.
On October
20, Evergrande said it had scrapped its plan to sell a 50.1% stake in
Evergrande Property Services Group to Hopson Development Holdings. The deal, if
it had gone through, could have provided Evergrande net cash of HK$20 billion
($2.57 billion) on October 12.
On November
16, China Business News, or Yicai.com, reported that Hui had personally
injected 7 billion yuan into his company since July 1. The report said that Hui
had already sold three luxury apartments in Hong Kong and several private jets,
and planned to sell two more luxury flats in Shenzhen and Guangzhou.
On the same
day, the company announced that it had agreed to sell all of its remaining 18%
stake in HengTen Networks Group, which operates an online video platform, for
HK$2.13 billion, or HK$1.28 per share, to a company owned by mainland investor
Li Shaoyu. The selling price represented a 24% discount on the closing price of
the Hong Kong-listed HengTen on November 17.
Prior to
this, Evergrande had already sold a 19.55% stake in HengTen for HK$4.37
billion. Shares of HengTen had gained 72% to close at HK$2.9 on Monday from
November 17.
On November
20, Yicai.com, a Chinese financial news media, said more and more lower-tier
Chinese cities were facing a down cycle in their property markets.
Since
October 12, at least 21 local governments in third and fourth-tier cities,
including Shenyang and Kunming, have launched new measures to forbid property
developers from cutting their selling prices by more than 15% from market
levels. When selling flats in the same building, developers are not allowed to
cut prices by more than 5% from the previous quarter.
Zhang Bo,
chief analyst at 58 Anjuke Institute, a research unit of the property
marketplace Anjuke.com, said property prices in lower-tier cities had fallen
rapidly in recent months, forcing local governments to limit price cuts. Zhang
said many local property developers wanted to replenish their cash flow by
offering discounts to homebuyers, creating a huge price pressure on the
markets.
Zhang added
that some property developers paid their contractors in property units due to a
lack of cash. He said these contractors then sold these apartments to
homebuyers at big discounts, adding more price pressure on the markets.
Fortunately, he said, these price pressures had not yet spread to the first and
second-tier cities.
It is still
unclear whether Evergrande would be able to boost its contracted sales or sell
more assets in the coming few months. On October 22, Hui said in an internal
meeting that the company’s annual property sales would be gradually reduced to
200 billion yuan within the coming decade from 700 billion yuan in the past.
He said
Evergrande would allocate more resources to its e-vehicle businesses in the
next 10 years.


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