(Bloomberg) --Chinese builders are looking to payment extensions or debt exchanges to avoid default on imminent bond obligations as liquidity conditions tighten for the real estate sector.
Modern Land (China) Co. is asking holders for a three-month extension on US$250 million dollar bond due to mature Oct. 25 while also announcing two top executives plan to loan the builder about US$125 million. Xinyuan Real Estate Co. has proposed paying just 5% of principal on a note due Oct. 15 and swapping that debt for bonds due 2023. Fitch Ratings called the move a distressed debt exchange while downgrading the firm to C.
Modern Land and Xinyuan respectively have US$1.35 billion and US$760 million of dollar bonds outstanding, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. In comparison, China Evergrande Group has US$19.2 billion.
Beijing’s clampdown on the real estate sector and uncertainty over Evergrande’s future have sent the nation’s dollar junk bond yields soaring to their highest in about a decade. That debt market, dominated by developers, saw notes fall as much as 10 cents on the dollar Monday, according to credit traders.
Rising borrowing costs have increased refinancing risks as firms may struggle to access the offshore bond market. That could trigger a wave of defaults across the real estate sector. Property firms’ missed payments have made up 36% of the record 175 billion yuan ($27.2 billion) in onshore corporate bond defaults this year, Bloomberg-compiled data show.
Read more about how Evergrande’s woes are spreading to the nation’s domestic bond market in Bloomberg’s China Credit Tracker
Still, for borrowers that can afford it, the selloff may also provide an opportunity to buy back bonds at deep discount and help shore up balance sheets. Yuzhou Group Holdings Co.’s chairman recently bought US$5.6 million of the company’s dollar notes through his associates, according to a filing last week.
Developers with bonds trading at distressed levels have these notes coming due this week:
Agile Group Holdings Ltd. 1.8 billion yuan note, Oct. 11
Aoyuan Corp. Group Ltd. 1.5 billion yuan bond, Oct. 12 (Said it has deposited funds for payment)
Xinyuan Real Estate Co. note with US$229 million outstanding, Oct. 15
Fujian Sunshine Group Co. 375 million yuan bond, Oct. 16
Guangzhou Times Holding Group Co. 1.7 billion yuan note, Oct. 17
In the meantime, investors are still waiting for clarity from Evergrande over a potential restructuring or solution for its liquidity crisis which some analysts say could drag on for months. Some of the firm’s bondholders fear Evergrande may sell assets that they’re counting on to back up their claims if the company collapses. It has US$148 million due on Oct 11 involving three dollar-bond coupons, Bloomberg-compiled data show, after having given no signs it made interest payments expected in September.
More defaults from Chinese property firms are expected under Beijing’s deleveraging campaign, said Kenneth Ho, Goldman Sachs Group Inc.’s head of Asia credit strategy. The sector “needs some kind of policy change in order to restore confidence.”
Photo: Bloomberg