China’s Evergrande crisis: clock ticking as
crucial debt default deadline looms
A default by the property giant could have
far-reaching consequences for China and global economy
The crisis threatening Evergrande and China’s economy
could deepen if the firm fails to make an $83.5m bond interest payment on
Saturday.
Martin
Farrer
Wed 20 Oct
2021 05.30 BST
The rescue
of embattled Chinese property company Evergrande appears to have stalled,
leaving the developer on the brink of default and threatening to unleash
contagion through the country’s giant real estate sector, home prices and the
economy.
The
problems enveloping Evergrande, which has eyewatering total debts of $305bn,
have hung over global financial markets in recent weeks and helped curb China’s
post-pandemic recovery.
But the
crisis could deepen further if Evergrande fails to meet a deadline of Saturday
night to stump up a $83.5m bond interest payment, triggering an official
default.
Evergrande
has already been given a 30-day grace period to make the repayment after
missing the initial deadline back in September. It has since missed other key
offshore, dollar-denominated bond payments worth another $193.3m. The clock is
now ticking on those debts as well.
The
sprawling property-to-electric-cars empire founded by former steel executive Xu
Jiayin in the mid-90s has been scrambling to offload assets in order to pay
back some of its loans. Its Chinese creditors are expected to be prioritised,
with foreign investors at the back of the queue.
Shares in
its main Hong Kong listing have lost 80% in the past year and have been
suspended since 4 October pending an announcement on how it is going to be rescued.
But there
were signs that the process has not been running to plan, raising the prospect
that Beijing will be forced to engineer a dismantling of Evergrande, the
country’s second-biggest developer, by absorbing most of it into existing
state-owned enterprises.
First,
Evergrande’s negotiations to sell its 51% stake in its profitable property
management unit, Evergrande Property Services Group, to another Chinese
developer for $2.6bn have been suspended, according to reports. The buyer,
Hopson Development Holdings, reportedly could not obtain the necessary
agreement from the provincial government in Guangdong, which is overseeing
Evergrande’s restructuring.
The sale of
Evergrande’s 26-storey waterfront headquarters in Hong Kong was expected to
raise another $1.7bn but the deal with Yuexiu has also reportedly been placed
on hold for the same reason.
The state
of the property market, which accounts for about 25% of the Chinese economy,
makes for an alarming backdrop to these problems. Home sales by value tumbled
16.9% in September from a year earlier, after a 19.7% drop in August, according
to Bloomberg calculations based on official data released on Monday.
With many
other developers also feeling the squeeze and struggling to repay loans, the
potentially colossal default of Evergrande could capsize the weakest, most
debt-laden parts of the property sector.
China
Properties joined a dozen others that have defaulted on over 47bn yuan ($7.3bn)
of bonds this year, per an estimate from CRIC, a Chinese property consultancy,
Reuters reported on Friday. S&P Global last week downgraded two of the
bigger players, Greenland, which has extensive developments in London, Sydney
and New York, and E-house Enterprise.
A smaller
developer, Sinic Holdings, became the latest to have its rating put in “selective
default” by S&P after it defaulted on $246m in bonds, having warned it was
likely to do so last week.
Terry Chan,
a senior research fellow at S&P Global Ratings, said the situation risked
exposing other large Chinese companies that have expanded in similarly rapid
fashion on the back of the three decades of debt-fuelled, breakneck economic
growth.
“Should
Evergrande default, there may be contagion effects for other developers, home
prices, and the economy. Evergrande’s cashflow troubles foreshadow what could
go wrong for liquidity-challenged Chinese corporates,” he said.
China’s
corporate sector accounts for almost a third (31%) of global corporate debt,
according a survey by S&P of 25,000 companies across the world. The
sector’s debt-to-GDP leverage ratio of 159% is one of the world’s highest – the
current global ratio is 101% – and presents a staggering $27tn headache for
Beijing.
China’s
president, Xi Jinping, has shown in recent years that he is determined to
tackle the issue as he pursues his goal of “common prosperity”. He has clipped
the wings of tech billionaires such as Jack Ma with firms forced to offload
assets and concede control over data to regulators. Highly profitable private
tutoring services beloved by China’s ambitious city-dwelling parents have been
outlawed too.
Now the
property sector’s “speculative” model is in Xi’s sights. Last year’s “three red
lines” for balance sheets made it much more difficult for large developers such
as Evergrande to secure the funding to keep the plates spinning on its
borrow-and-build model.
However,
Angus Coote of Jamieson Coote Bonds in Melbourne, Australia, said China’s
central bank was “on the front foot”, flooding the market with liquidity –
another 100bn yuan ($15.6bn) on Wednesday – and would contain the contagion.
“Banks have
been told to keep lending to healthy developers,” he said. “The biggest ones
can cause a ripple effect … but it’s manageable without any contagion is our
view. Beijing is going to let it down slowly.”
Helge
Berger, head of the International Monetary Fund’s China arm, told Bloomberg the
risks to the wider economy had been “contained”(£) for now but that authorities
should continue to monitor in case of escalation.
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