Table of Contents
What’s happening?
- China’s real estate crisis isn’t showing any sign of letting up.
- Embattled conglomerate Evergrande rattled global markets in September by warning it could default on its huge debts.
- Since then, more developers have made similar public confessions, unnerving investors and raising fears of contagion across the vast sector.
- The domino effect of the falling of Chinese companies is in full swing, as one after another, four Chinese real estate companies have toppled.
- Modern Land China has become the latest developer from Asia’s largest economy to miss a dollar bond payment,
- Underscoring the stress spreading across the sector, as the property balloon burst at the time when Beijing was at its most vulnerable.
- According to a filing on Tuesday with the Singapore stock exchange where the bond is traded, the corporation failed to pay interest and principal on a $250 million bond.
- This month, Fantasia Holdings, Sinic Holdings, and China Properties have all defaulted on offshore notes, While China Evergrande Group narrowly avoided defaulting last week by making a coupon payment on time.
Ratings lowered
- As liquidity concerns intensify amid mounting maturities, as per reports, global rating agencies have already lowered the scores of a record 44 Chinese developers this month.
Evergrande disaster and the downfall of Chinese economy
- Evergrande was in talks to sell a 50.1% stake in its Evergrande Property Services unit to smaller rival – Hopson Development.
- Evergrande was once China’s top-selling developer and is now suffering under more than $300 billion in debt.
- The group has been struggling to acquire funds to pay its various lenders and suppliers, amid fears that it would technically default on one of its international bonds.
- Earlier this month, the People’s Bank of China said that Evergrande had mismanaged its business, but risks to the financial system were “controllable.“
- Evergrande stated in its earlier filing that it would continue to implement measures “to alleviate the liquidity concerns”, and that it would use its best efforts to engage with its creditors for the renewal or extension of its borrowings.
Foreign investments moving out
- China lovers are in for a shock, and foreign investors who had parked their money in the China Evergrande Group are in for an even bigger shock.
- The real estate giant, which is at the brink of making a default on debt repayments, has made a shocking announcement – it will prioritise interest payments on domestically issued bonds.
- This has raised suspicions amongst foreign investors that they will be the last ones to get repaid.
- Hengda, Evergrande’s primary unit in mainland China, has announced that it will pay coupons worth $19 million on its October 2025 bond, that becomes due on Tuesday.
- The announcement came as a shock for foreign investors, as the real estate giant has failed to meet three rounds of bond interest payments in the offshore market worth $277 million, since late last month.
Xi Jinping misadventure
- Authorities’ regulatory assault on Chinese developers has locked down finance options for developers, who are seeking to rein in excessive debt, before it triggers a financial disaster.
- Companies can only increase borrowings, provided their balance sheets match the so-called “three redlines” regulations, which include net gearing, liquidity, and other criteria.
- Banks have reduced their exposure to the industry as a result of the crackdown, and corporations haven’t used the offshore bond market in over a year.
- Despite these steps, Evergrande’s missing payments and smaller rivals’ defaults have generated fears of contagion across China’s $50 trillion financial system.
- According to S&P Global Ratings, developers are expected to redeem 480 billion yuan in domestic and offshore bonds over the next year, accounting for over a quarter of their free cash reserves.
- Now with the fall of the fourth real estate giant, and Evergrande also being a lost cause, China’s financial institutions are facing a fierce heat.
- However, the spillover effect is also in place, with foreign stock exchanges, like the one in Singapore facing the heat of Chinese companies, going bust because of the domestic policies of Xi Jinping.
Conclusion
- It’s unclear how the crisis will be resolved.
- The companies could try to restructure their debts and work things out with their lenders.
- They could also seek bailouts from the Chinese government.
Q) Which of the following is correct regarding Real Estate Regulation and Development Act (RERA)?
- The act came into effect fully from 1st May, 2016.
- It seeks to protect home-buyers as well as help boost investments in the real estate sector
- 1 only
- 2 only
- Both 1 & 2
- None of the above
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