Evergrande deadline sends chills through $400bn Asian
debt market
Traders fret over fallout if indebted Chinese property
developer begins to miss payments
Thomas Hale
and Hudson Lockett in Hong Kong YESTERDAY
https://www.ft.com/content/7ac2d661-5a63-4768-91a1-182f02b2afa5
Deepening
worries over Evergrande have ignited selling in a $428bn corner of the Asian
debt market, underscoring how the crisis is spreading to other assets as
uncertainty mounted over the fate of the indebted Chinese property developer.
An
Evergrande offshore bond on which an interest payment was due on Thursday was
trading at about $0.28 on the dollar, a signal of substantial distress, as
traders fretted over the potential fallout if the company begins missing
payments.
Evergrande
did not announce whether it had made the payment. If a payment is missed,
Evergrande will have a 30-day grace period before an official default.
As fears of
a default grew this week, yields on US dollar-denominated bonds issued by
riskier Asian borrowers soared to almost 12 per cent, the highest level since a
jump during the early stages of the coronavirus pandemic, according to an Ice
Data Services index. The yields stood at 7 per cent at the start of the year.
A failure
to make the $83.5m interest payment due on Thursday could spark China’s
biggest-ever debt restructuring. It would also mark the most severe shock to
date across a market to which international asset managers had been enticed by
lucrative returns as global bond yields sat near historic lows.
The
Evergrande crisis emerged in part in the wake of Beijing’s broader crackdown on
borrowing by Chinese property developers, the dominant issuers of
dollar-denominated high-yield debt in Asia, which now face a domestic slowdown.
It would be
“naive to think that the turmoil in the [property] market doesn’t have the
potential to have second-order and third-order impact . . . particularly on the
capital markets and the bond markets”, Noel Quinn, HSBC chief executive, told a
Bank of America conference on Wednesday.
Evergrande’s
liquidity crunch represents the latest regulatory risk for global investors in
the world’s biggest emerging market, after a chaotic year that has already
ushered in unprecedented curbs on the country’s tech and education sectors.
“Right now,
as far as I understand, the view offshore, outside China, including Hong Kong
and the UK, is near panic about China,” said Stephen Jen, chief executive at
Eurizon SLJ Asset Management. “It’s a culmination of all these surprising
regulatory measures that have hit the market.”
Another big
international fund manager in London said they were inundated with inquiries
this week about exposure to Evergrande.
The company
has about $20bn outstanding in dollar-denominated debt. As of its most recent
filings in June, emerging market specialist Ashmore was the biggest single
holder of the bond with the payment due on Thursday with a $63m stake, while
other big investors as of July included UBS and HSBC.
A group of
offshore investors in Evergrande this month hired law firm Kirkland & Ellis
and investment bank Moelis to advise them on a potential restructuring.
The
five-year bond, which pays regular “coupon” payments of 8.25 per cent and was
issued in 2017 when Evergrande chair Hui Ka Yan was crowned China’s richest
man, has sold off sharply.
On
Wednesday, Evergrande said a Rmb232m ($35.9m) interest payment also due on
Thursday on an onshore bond had been “resolved through off-exchange
negotiations”, but did not clarify when or how much of that amount it would
pay.
On Thursday
morning, the People’s Bank of China injected a net Rmb110bn into the country’s
financial system, the biggest liquidity boost move in eight months, according
to Bloomberg data.
The
developer has for months sought to stave off a liquidity crisis, but it has
struggled to raise enough cash to reduce its debts while continuing to pay
suppliers, creditors and retail investors who descended on its Shenzhen
headquarters last week.
While
yields on Chinese property developers have soared in recent weeks as the
severity of Evergrande’s cash crunch emerged, yields on the Ice index have
added 2 percentage points this month alone. Real estate makes up 42 per cent of
the market, with most of the borrowing coming from China.
“There’s a
lot of negativity in the price,” said Paul Lukaszewski, head of corporate debt
for Asia-Pacific at Aberdeen Standard Investments. He estimated that current
prices implied that about 30 per cent of Chinese high-yield issuers rated B, a
level considered high-risk, would default.
The overall
Asian corporate high-yield market has more than doubled from just $169bn in
2014, JPMorgan data showed. While the majority of investment comes from Asia,
prominent international funds are also big players in the market, which is one
of the most direct routes for offshore investment into China’s strictly
controlled financial system.
“The global
funds have very big investments in the sector because it’s high yielding,” said
one banker based in Hong Kong. He added that while Evergrande had “always been
a name that a lot of people felt very uncomfortable with”, some investors “had
to have exposure” because of its inclusion in global bond indices, benchmarks
against which fund managers’ performance is graded.
Funds
managed by HSBC and BlackRock bought Evergrande bonds in July and August
respectively and boosted their holdings this year as they expanded in size.
While
Evergrande has thrust China’s crackdown on real estate into the spotlight,
pressure has been mounting for years. In 2018, the government said proceeds
from offshore borrowing should be used to refinance existing debts rather than
investing.
Fears over
refinancing have hit other developers with dollar debts, including Fantasia
Group, which was downgraded last week, and Guangzhou R & F. An inability to
refinance could also stoke economic concerns across China if construction of
new homes slumped.
As well as
the high yields on offer, investors have also been drawn to Chinese assets
because of the perception that they are weakly linked with global markets.
Lukaszewski suggested that the appeal of the overall high-yield market in Asia
was that it “marches to its own beat, and that beat is local factors”.
Jen added:
“Sitting in London, just imagine a situation where something happens in the US
and everybody in China is in a panic about what has just happened . . . whereas
the American investors are very calm. Just think about this
contrast . . . which party might be right?”
Additional
reporting by Attracta Mooney in London


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