With about $US10 billion ($15.4 billion) dollar bonds outstanding,foreign investors,of course,want to know what this will mean for their holdings,such as the recovery rate and timing of a debt workout.
First,the good. Country Gardenis not China Evergrande Group. That’s a much better-run company. It’s unlikely to have the kind of opaque web of off-balance sheet debt that Evergrande – or many other mainland developers – wove. Its financial reports are more credible. As of the 2022 year-end,Country Garden held 87 billion yuan ($18.4 billion) in unrestricted cash,excluding that in escrow accounts. That money will probably be used to deliver unfinished projects,rather than shifted to repay some hidden debt somewhere.
Now,the bad. In a restructuring scenario,investors are unlikely to see any money upfront. Exchanging their notes for payment-in-kind bonds – a feature distressed firms often use to preserve cash – is very much on the cards.
Country Garden’s Achilles’ heel is a heavy exposure to smaller cities,which are plagued by housing oversupply and population outflows. What doesn’t help either is that the government has shifted its easing policy to larger,more resilient cities,hardly benefiting the builder. Sales will take time to recover.
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By the company’s own account,it needs about 28 billion yuan to 30 billion yuan in sales a month to generate enough cash and be able to finish presold projects. However,it hasn’t hit the break-even point this year,and the past few months have been even worse.
There is no doubt that Country Garden is going through a liquidity crisis. Investors will have to be patient and accept that there are no payouts in the immediate future.
Now here comes the outright ugly. It’s possible that Country Garden’s dollar bonds will be in default for a long time and there’s no restructuring whatsoever.