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China

Country Garden just confirmed the ‘worst fears’ about China’s property market

By
Pearl Liu
Pearl Liu
and
Bloomberg
Bloomberg
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By
Pearl Liu
Pearl Liu
and
Bloomberg
Bloomberg
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August 12, 2023, 4:01 PM ET
Residential buildings developed by Country Garden Holdings in Baoding, Hebei province, China. The developer  slid in equity and credit markets after it canceled a share placement, adding to distress just as a cash crunch fuels concern about its ability to avoid a first-ever default.
Residential buildings developed by Country Garden Holdings in Baoding, Hebei province, China. The developer slid in equity and credit markets after it canceled a share placement, adding to distress just as a cash crunch fuels concern about its ability to avoid a first-ever default. Qilai Shen/Bloomberg via Getty Images

One of China’s largest developers is wobbling and has less than 30 days to avoid a default on its bonds, the latest signal of the government’s struggle to end the nation’s property slump as the economy slows.

Country Garden Holdings Co., which had total liabilities of 1.4 trillion yuan ($194 billion) at the end of last year, said it had underestimated the market downturn and is facing the biggest challenge since it was established in 1992. The property firm expects to post a net loss of up to 55 billion yuan for the first half of 2023 compared with earnings of about 1.91 billion yuan a year earlier.

Country Garden Real Estate Group Co Ltd. Said it will suspend trading in nearly a dozen onshore bonds starting Monday, two days after the Chinese real estate company’s controlling shareholder said it would report a multi-billion-dollar loss for the first half of this year.

The developer’s liquidity crunch is adding to concerns about the potential drag the industry will have on growth in the world’s second-largest economy, sending a Bloomberg index of the country’s junk dollar bonds to the lowest level since last year on Thursday.

“What Country Garden messaged in the latest announcement just confirmed investors’ worst fears about the dire state of China’s ailing property market,” said Wee Liam Goh, a portfolio manager at UOB Asset Management.

Regulators across China’s government have been seeking since late last year to revive demand in the real estate sector, which makes up about a fifth of China’s gross domestic product. Measures such as easing mortgage rates on first-home purchases have so far failed to stem the crisis, with home sales tumbling the most in a year in July.

The downturn has left the property sector caught in a vicious cycle, after an earlier government campaign aimed at getting developers to deleverage caused housing purchases to slump. That crimped the cash flow of builders, leading to a record amount of defaults.

Unprecedented protests broke out across cities last year as builders ran out of cash to complete and deliver apartments to buyers, spurring policymakers to intervene. The Communist Party pledged further easing of property measures following its Politburo meeting in late July.

“While there have been positive policy signals” since then, “the property sector requires more tangible and timely policy support for stabilization,” said Andy Suen, co-head of Asia ex-Japan fixed income at PineBridge Investments. “Persistent defaults among developers could further dampen homebuyer confidence.”

The latest crisis came after bondholders of two dollar notes issued by Country Garden, helmed by one of China’s richest women Yang Huiyan, failed to receive coupon payments due Aug. 7, according to bondholders who requested anonymity.

The renewed turmoil comes just as signs emerge that economic demand is weakening as hopes of a rapid recovery following the rollback of pandemic measures fizzle out.

Consumer and producer prices fell in July from a year ago, the latest data show. The statistics bureau said the contraction is likely to be temporary and consumer demand is improving.

Ultimately, “the economic recovery from the Covid reopening is mainly a consumption recovery, which makes it even more crucial to rescue the real estate sector at the current juncture,” said Tommy Wu, senior China economist at Commerzbank AG. “The failure of another major Chinese developer would pose tremendous pressure on the already-slowing economy.”

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