The world’s most indebted developer said it expects that a restructuring support agreement will be ready by the end of March, after it won preliminary support from a group of major creditors.
(Bloomberg) — The world’s most indebted developer said it expects that a restructuring support agreement will be ready by the end of March, after it won preliminary support from a group of major creditors.
China Evergrande Group said during a Hong Kong court hearing on Monday that creditors will get access to term sheets as early as Wednesday. The progress allowed for adjournment of the case to July 31.
The announcement came after an ad-hoc group of offshore bondholders expressed support for Evergrande’s debt overhaul plans right before the hearing, people familiar with the matter said on Sunday. The builder sweetened its preliminary proposal including terms of a debt-to-equity swap option and the amortization arrangement in a debt extension, the people said.
An agreement would be a milestone in the saga of Evergrande, the poster child of woes in China’s real estate industry whose tumble into distress over the past two years set off contagion in the nation’s $150 billion junk dollar bond market. Indications of how much creditors can recover will serve as important reference points in the debt restructurings of other defaulted developers.
Evergrande’s lawyer said during the court hearing that the company is planning to release its restructuring terms on the Hong Kong stock exchange on Wednesday. The ad-hoc group expects the restructuring to be effective by Oct. 1, though the timeline could be subject to change, according to the group’s lawyer.
The lawsuit in Hong Kong hinges on an alleged financial obligation of HK$862.5 million ($110 million). The investor who filed the petition last June is seeking a winding-up of the firm if he’s not paid the alleged debt.
Any winding-up order would result in both the company and investors losing control of the debt-restructuring process.
But there’s much more at stake. Evergrande had nearly 2 trillion yuan ($290 billion) in liabilities as of its latest public results in 2021, and the company’s fate will impact parties from home owners to banks.
Hong Kong courts ordered two much smaller Chinese builders to wind up in late 2022 after they were sued for debt nonpayment, part of a series of actions taken by creditors in response to a record wave of bond defaults.
Evergrande missed several self-imposed deadlines to release debt proposals last year and as of several weeks ago had yet to reach an agreement with major creditors on a restructuring framework.
There’s been a de-facto shutdown of the Chinese junk dollar bond market that developers have dominated, following a government crackdown on excessive debt in the property sector. That caused a cash crunch for many builders and a slump in new-home sales. Evergrande first defaulted on dollar bonds in December 2021 after several months of not making interest payments by initial deadlines.
Authorities have unveiled myriad steps in recent months to stem China’s property woes. But investors have predicted the help will disproportionately aid stronger builders, leaving distressed ones and their creditors to go through what’s often a long and opaque restructuring process.
–With assistance from Jackie Cai and Emma Dong.
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