Chinese developers face liquidity test as curbs loom

Bloomberg

Chinese developers are facing the biggest liquidity test in more than four years, exacerbating challenges brought on by stringent funding restrictions and a prolonged profitability drop.
Cash reserves of the nation’s 50 largest-listed home builders were just enough to cover short-term debt as of June 30, the least since 2016 when China began deleveraging its economy, according to recent earnings data compiled by Bloomberg. That metric fell below 0.5 for eight companies, the most in four years, signalling greater risk.
Homebuilders also face renewed financing restrictions after a brief relaxation during the Covid-19 outbreak as policy makers seek to prevent asset bubbles that could destabilise the economy.
“It’s a bad signal for developers’ cash flow,” said Deng Hao, chief executive of Beijing GEC Asset Management.
“Authorities are tightening the residential sector even with the pandemic. Developers that didn’t actively cut debt to control liquidity risks will face a stringent test.”
China’s housing watchdog and the central bank said last month they created draft rules to monitor developers’ capital. The proposal may lead to a tightening of overall financing, according to S&P Global Ratings. Already, China’s regulator of the vast interbank market took a step to curb the amount developers can raise, people familiar have said.
It’s bad timing for developers. Real estate firms nationwide face a record maturity of debt in the first quarter
next year. An equivalent of around $41 billion in local currency and US dollar bonds are due, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. This may heighten repayment pressure for builders with annual sales lower than 100 billion yuan, S&P analysts wrote in a note.
Their debt structure has also worsened. Among the top 50 developers, short-term borrowing was equivalent to 63% of long-term borrowing as of June, the highest proportion in five years, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Investors are closely monitoring credit risks after Tahoe Group Co, a high profile luxury developer, and a unit of Tianjin Real Estate Group Co, a state-owned residential builder, defaulted on local bonds, Deng said.
Almost all developers toed the party line at their earnings calls, vowing to pare borrowing or keep leverage in check. The most indebted builder, China Evergrande Group, pledged a substantial debt cut on all possible fronts by year end after a temporary failure to remake itself a leaner company.
Their plans to rein in debt will be hurt by the weakest profit growth in at least five years. The coronavirus slowed their pace of construction and stringent home-selling rules damped margins, raising concerns on the outlook.
Earnings at the top 50 edged up just 0.04% in the first half, the narrowest since at least 2015, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Gross margin at the three largest players, Country Garden Holdings Co, Evergrande and China Vanke Co shrank at least 2.9 percentage points from a year prior.
“As the government aims to keep home market stable, it’s not very likely for developers to expand gross margin in future,” Country Garden’s Chief Financial Officer Wu Bijun said. “We aim to increase net profit by controlling expenses and costs.”
Vanke, which saw its gross margin fall by 4.4 percentage points, estimated a further compression by year end.
Shares of 12 major Chinese developers listed in Hong Kong are trading at about 4.3 times forecast earnings, close to a nine-year low.

Leave a Reply

Send this to a friend