Explained: How China Evergrande's debt troubles pose a global risk

explained
Explained: How China Evergrande's Debt Troubles Pose A Global Risk
A housing complex by Chinese property developer Evergrande in Huaian in China's eastern Jiangsu province. Photo: STR/AFP via Getty
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By Clare Jim

China's Evergrande Group has missed a dollar bond interest payment deadline, moving closer to a potential default and fuelling worries about a collapse that could send shockwaves through China's economy and beyond.

What is Evergrande?

Chairman Hui Ka Yan founded Evergrande in Guangzhou in 1996. It is China's second-largest property developer with $110 billion in sales last year, $355 billion (€302 billion) in assets, and over 1,300 developments nationwide. It listed in Hong Kong in 2009.

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Evergrande grew rapidly through a loan-supported land-buying spree and selling apartments quickly at low margins. It has 200,000 staff and hires 3.8 million annually for developments.

Slowing growth has seen it branch into businesses such as insurance, bottled water, football and electric vehicles (EVs).

How did concern arise over debt?

In September last year, a leaked letter showed Evergrande pleading for government support to approve a now-dropped backdoor stock market listing. Sources told Reuters the letter was authentic; Evergrande called it fake.

In June, Evergrande said it did not pay some commercial paper on time, and in July a court froze a $20 million bank deposit held by the firm at the bank's request.

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The firm in late August said construction at some of its developments had halted due to missed payments to contractors and suppliers. Sources have told Reuters that it also missed payments to bank and trust loans in the past few weeks.

Liabilities, including payables, total 1.97 trillion yuan (€260 billion) – about 2 per cent of China's gross domestic product.

How has Evergrande reduced debt?

Evergrande accelerated efforts to cut debt last year after regulators introduced caps on three debt ratios, dubbed the “three red lines”. It aims to meet requirements by 2022-end.

It offered steep discounts on residential developments to spur sales and sold the bulk of its commercial properties. Since the second half of 2020, it has had a $555 million secondary share sale, raised $1.8 billion by listing its property management unit, and saw its EV unit sell a $3.4 billion stake.

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On Sept. 14, it said asset and equity disposal plans had failed to make material progress.

What's the risk?

The central bank in 2018 said companies including Evergrande might pose systemic risk to China's financial system.

The firm's liabilities involved as many as 128 banks and over 121 non-banking institutions, the leaked letter showed.

Late repayments could trigger cross-defaults as many financial institutions are exposed via direct loans and indirect holdings through different financial instruments.

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In the US dollar bond market, Evergrande accounts for 4 per cent of Chinese real estate high-yielding debt, data from Singapore bank DBS showed. A default could further trigger a sell-off across high-yield credit markets.

What about operations outside Mainland China?

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In Hong Kong, Evergrande owns an office tower and residential development as well as two nearly completed residential developments, plus a vast undeveloped land parcel.

It has spent billions of dollars acquiring stakes in automobile technology developers, including Sweden's NEVS, the Netherlands' e-Traction and Britain's Protean. It also has joint ventures with Germany's Hofer and Sweden's Koenigsegg.

What have regulators said?

The central bank and banking regulator in August ordered Evergrande to reduce debt risk.

Regulators have approved an Evergrande proposal to renegotiate payment deadlines with banks and other creditors, media reported. Guangzhou government is also seeking major lenders' opinions about establishing a creditor committee.

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