Nervy markets await outcome for opaque bond tied to Evergrande

A dollar note maturing Oct 3 issued at an initial amount of US$260 million has been guaranteed by Evergrande

Published Mon, Oct 4, 2021 · 05:50 AM

Shanghai

CHINA Evergrande Group has already fallen behind on payments to banks, suppliers and holders of onshore investment products, and has not given any indication that it paid two recent dollar bond coupons.

The world's most indebted developer may be facing its next big debt test from Sunday, underscoring the broader risks of opaque obligations in credit markets already on edge.

People familiar have said that a dollar note maturing Oct 3 issued at an initial amount of US$260 million by an entity called Jumbo Fortune Enterprises is guaranteed by Evergrande. As the maturity is a Sunday, the effective due date is Monday.

The issuer is a joint venture whose owners include Hengda Real Estate, Evergrande's main onshore unit. Non-payment of the bond principal would constitute a default as the note has no grace period, although five business days would be allowed if failure to pay is down to administrative and technical error, said the people.

Details of the guarantees were not broadly known as the note prospectus is not publicly available and the deal was not listed on exchanges. Any failure to pay Jumbo Fortune's note may also pose a risk of crossdefault for Evergrande's other bonds, said Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Daniel Fan.

A NEWSLETTER FOR YOU
Tuesday, 12 pm
Property Insights

Get an exclusive analysis of real estate and property news in Singapore and beyond.

Creditors of the Jumbo note could potentially ask the trustee to declare a formal default if they achieve a minimum threshold of investors, and that could trigger holders of other dollar bonds to do the same, he said.

Uncertainly over the full extent of Evergrande's debt load, beyond its more than US$300 billion reported in liabilities, has plagued investors since a liquidity crisis at the firm stoked fears of a collapse that could trigger financial and economic contagion. Authorities ranging from Federal Reserve officials to Hong Kong's central bank are looking into just how exposed financial institutions are to the crisis.

Standard Chartered's head of China macro strategy Becky Liu expects Evergrande has more structured products such as guaranteed bonds, similar to the Jumbo Fortune note, with offshore dollar bonds making up just 6 per cent of the firm's total reported liabilities.

The law firm White & Case is advising various investors with regards to Jumbo Fortune, a spokesperson for the firm said.

There was no response from Evergrande to a request for comment about its interest payments or debt guarantees.

Debt crises historically have a way of worsening when obligations that had flown under the radar suddenly start showing up on screen. In the 2007-2008 global financial crisis, opaque mortgage-backed securities whose risks were hard to quantify played a major role.

More recently in China, credit markets have at times been shaken by uncertainty about debt guarantees and intertwined obligations that were excluded from balance sheets.

Cross-guarantees have been a problem for China over the past decade with the rise of shadow banking, said Andrew Collier, managing director of Orient Capital Research in Hong Kong.

"There is little ability to find out the size of the problem until there is a debt blowup and creditors worry about not getting paid."

Some Evergrande dollar securities have repayment acceleration provisions which stipulate that any indebtedness reaching US$20 million could constitute an event of default, according to the offering memorandum of notes seen by Bloomberg.

Creditors are not able to take legal action until bonds are formally declared to be in default. While creditors have the option of filing lawsuits in an offshore court to enforce Evergrande's payment obligations, "practically, bondholders may enter into some informal standstill and negotiate with the issuer", said Mr Fan at Bloomberg Intelligence.

The embattled developer is not the only firm adding to its debt piles with bonds that are not listed on exchanges and may lack much publicly available information. Private placements are popular among China's real estate firms as these securities can be simpler to arrange than public deals - they are typically sold to a small group of investors with no expectations about the size and more room to negotiate on pricing.

Evergrande is likely to have more securities of a similar kind and "if holders don't tell, no one will know of such debts' existence", said Ting Meng, senior Asia credit strategist at ANZ Banking Group. BLOOMBERG

BT is now on Telegram!

For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to  t.me/BizTimes

Property

SUPPORT SOUTH-EAST ASIA'S LEADING FINANCIAL DAILY

Get the latest coverage and full access to all BT premium content.

SUBSCRIBE NOW

Browse corporate subscription here