Country Garden Sinks; Land Sale Rules Relaxed: Evergrande Update

(Bloomberg) — Country Garden Services Holdings Co. tumbled as much as 17% in Hong Kong Friday, a day after the Chinese property management firm announced a $1 billion share placement amid an industrywide liquidity crunch. 

The slump comes as the nation’s developers scramble to raise cash. A unit of Chinese developer Yango Group Co. has won bondholder approval to issue new debt to swap for three maturing dollar bonds, effectively allowing it to delay upcoming repayments and avoid a default.  

Meanwhile, several Chinese cities have eased rules for land sales amid waning interest among cash-strapped developers, in the latest sign of growing pressures on local governments as a housing market slowdown intensifies.  

Key Developments:

  • China Property Developers Liquidity Stress to Continue: Moody’s
  • Evergrande Unit Resumes Work at 63 Home Projects in Guangdong
  • China Cities Ease Land Bidding Rules as Property Stress Spreads
  • Yango Group Gets Bondholder Approval For Exchange Offer
  • Evergrande Asks HK Agents to Sell More Flats for Fees Due: SCMP

Agile Remits Funds to Repay HKD, USD Loans (1:21 p.m. HK)

Agile Group Holdings Ltd. has remitted funds for the repayment of a HK$3.34 billion ($429 million) loan and a $60 million loan that are both due on Nov. 22, according to a Hong Kong stock exchange filing.

China Developers Liquidity Stress to Continue: Moody’s (1:10 p.m.)

Chinese real estate firms’ limited funding access, slowing contracted sales and weakened controls over project-level cash are dampening cash flow and liquidity, Moody’s Investors Service said in a report.

Everrgrande Resumes Work at Guangdong Projects (1:00 p.m. HK)

Evergrande’s main onshore property development subsidiary said it has resumed construction at 63 home projects in Guangzhou, Foshan, and some other cities in the southern Guangdong province, according to a company statement. The unit reiterated a pledge to deliver quality apartments. 

China Cities Ease Land Bidding Rules (12:50 p.m. HK)

Some Chinese cities have relaxed rules for land sales after cash-strapped developers became reluctant to bid, threatening the biggest revenue earner for local governments. 

Several large cities including Shanghai and Nanjing have announced details of land sales plans in December, offering more plots than those in the last round, the official Securities Times reported. Some eased transaction requirements for developers, such as by reducing deposits ahead of bidding or refraining from asking for full payment within a month, the newspaper reported. 

Country Garden Services Tumbles After $1b Placement (11:18 a.m. HK)

Country Garden Services slumped as much as 17% in Hong Kong trade, a day after it said it is looking to raise HK$8 billion ($1.03 billion) through a share sale, the latest Chinese real estate firm to tap equity markets amid a liquidity crunch engulfing the sector. Its shares were trading around the HK$51 level late morning, after the company confirmed placement pricing at HK$53.35 per share Thursday.

Zhongliang Delivers Bond Payment (8:15 a.m. HK)

Zhongliang Holdings Group Co. said it has remitted funds to the trustee for repayment of the outstanding principal amount and accrued interest of a dollar bond due this month, according to a Hong Kong stock exchange filing. 

Evergrande Asks HK Agents to Sell More Flats (7:56 a.m. HK)

China Evergrande Group is offering to pay outstanding commission fees owed on two flats for every additional one of similar value that agents sell at one of its Hong Kong projects, the South China Morning Post reported, citing notes from one of a series of meetings between the developer and property agencies.

Evergrande attributed the payment delay to its cash flow problems, saying that the project’s financing structure also “made it impossible to take a large amount of funds to pay commissions.”

Yango Gets Nod on Debt Exchange (7:36 a.m. HK)

A unit of Yango Group Co. announced that bondholders approved its offer to exchange three of its dollar bonds, according to a Thursday filing to the Hong Kong stock exchange. 

The developer will issue $669.9 million of new notes due in September to replace the existing three bonds. Yango Justice International Ltd. proposed the debt swap on Nov. 1 after seeing “enormous pressure” on short-term liquidity, saying then that if support fell short the company “may not be able to repay” existing notes.   

A look at Evergrande’s maturity schedule:

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