[BEIJING] Most of China’s biggest defaulted developers are reaching a restructuring milestone, as creditors increasingly accept that better terms are unlikely during a real estate crisis that has triggered US$130 billion of defaults.
Eight of China’s 10 most indebted developers have largely, if not entirely, put the offshore restructuring process behind them. One of those, Sunac China Holdings, which has already gained majority support for its restructuring from creditors, is scheduled to hold a vote on Tuesday (Oct 14), among the last procedural hurdles it has to clear.
While policymakers have rolled out a slew of measures aimed at propping up the housing market, sales are still sluggish and Chinese developers continue to face challenges. So far, eight of the country’s 30 major builders that have defaulted on US dollar debt have received liquidation orders, including China Evergrande Group and China South City Holdings, according to Bloomberg-compiled data. Many defaulted companies are still working on onshore debt plans also.
Bondholders who once banged tables and peppered executives with questions during debt negotiations are now more muted, sources familiar with several Chinese real estate restructuring deals said.
“Creditors have come to realise that things won’t get better anytime soon, so they are willing to take larger haircuts,” said Ron Thompson, managing director and head of the Asia restructuring practice at Alvarez & Marsal.
The bonds of most big developers are trading at around 10 cents on the US dollar, indicating that investors are not expecting to recover much from the restructurings.
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When Sunac’s restructuring process began in 2022, creditors baulked at a proposal to swap some debt for equity at a conversion price of HK$20 (S$3.30) a share, Bloomberg reported earlier. In February 2023, they held contentious all-day meetings with the chief financial officer Gao Xi, seeking better terms. Months later, more than 75 per cent of offshore creditors had signed on to the deal with a much lower conversion price.
Less than two years after completing its initial restructuring, Sunac ran into repayment problems and pursued another one. This time, the deal took about two months to officially wrap up, compared with a little over a year for its first restructuring.
Such condensed debt talks are becoming more common across the property sector. In general, some bondholders do not even bother to dial in to calls about small things once the basic restructuring framework is done, according to two restructuring advisers.
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Yuzhou Group Holdings, for example, spent more than two years negotiating its restructuring, which it sought court approval for last year. When it later revised some terms, it faced little opposition from bondholders, according to sources familiar with the matter, and the deal was concluded within months.
While some creditors are willing to accept more onerous terms, others are choosing to abandon debt talks and seek immediate liquidation.
That was the case with state-backed builder China South City. The company missed a couple of deadlines set by a key bondholder group and eventually proposed restructuring terms that were far from the recovery of around 70 cents to 80 cents on the US dollar that bondholders had sought, sources familiar with the matter said.
At its last winding up hearing in August, Hong Kong High Court judge Linda Chan asked creditors if one more adjournment would be acceptable to them. But the bondholders’ lawyer insisted on immediate liquidation instead.
Sunac declined to comment. Yuzhou and China South City did not respond to requests for comment.
The China real estate era has changed and the last thing international creditors are looking for is dragged out talks, said Jason He, debt capital markets advisory leader at Deloitte China.
“Either take the terms or press the liquidation button, both work,” he added. BLOOMBERG