But only 22 major cities,including Beijing where the current requirements are 35 per cent and 60 per cent,have room to reduce them. Country Garden’s land bank exposure to these areas is only 13 per cent,HSBC Holdings estimates. Its stronghold is smaller cities,not metropolises like Shanghai and Shenzhen.
However,a turnaround is possible,given Country Garden’s robust operational track record. While similar in asset size,its liabilities are only at around 60 per cent those of China Evergrande Group,the world’s most indebted developer.
Here are a few things Country Garden can do.
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First,buy itself time. Stay current on coupon repayments and hope for the best. Country Garden has about $US10 billion dollar bonds outstanding,but the earliest maturity is not until 2024. To avert a default,the developer needs to repay $US22.5 million in two coupons this week.
It does have more than $US1 billion worth of yuan bonds maturing this year. As such,management needs to spend time with investors,convince them that it can survive,and somehow obtain debt extensions.
The company is already taking this approach. It has won a last-minute approval from creditors to extend a 3.9 billion yuan ($US537 million) bond,stretching payments into 2026. This note,originally due on September 2,was one of the biggest hurdles this year. Beyond this month,Country Garden has two more sizable yuan notes maturing in 2023:one in late November and another in early December.