Morgan Stanley downgrades China's property sector
It cites risks that policymakers may act to cool overheated market, further prompting developers to cut their debt levels
MORGAN Stanley downgraded its outlook on China's property sector amid risks that policymakers may take steps to cool down the overheated market and further prompt developers to cut their debt levels.
The US brokerage lowered its recommendation on the real estate sector to "in-line" from "attractive" in a note on Thursday. Strong sales continue and land sales "haven't cooled off yet, therefore policy risk is still to the downside", analysts led by Elly Chen wrote.
China's property firms are under pressure as Beijing moves to curb leverage in the debt-laden sector that has propelled a record wave of corporate bond defaults this year. This comes at a time when authorities have been attempting to stabilise some of the highest property prices in the world and concerns are rising over the financial health of China Evergrande Group, the nation's most-indebted developer.
"We expect government property policy to remain relatively tight, and cities with overheated markets may need to tighten further," the Morgan Stanley analysts wrote. That may potentially include the introduction of a property tax pilot programme and inclusion of commercial paper into 'three red lines' evaluation.
The brokerage also sees China continuing its deleveraging push by tightening funding channels and setting property-related loan caps for lenders. It expects gross margins for developers under its coverage to fall 0.4 percentage points in the 2021 fiscal year due to bookings of low-margin projects with high land cost and capped selling prices.
Chinese municipal governments are set to announce more home-purchase curbs, "casting a shadow over developers' contracted sales outlook in 2H", Bloomberg Intelligence analysts wrote in a note.
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Meanwhile, concern about Evergrande is also spilling over into the rest of the offshore high-yield bond market, which is dominated by developers. BLOOMBERG
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