Asian non-bank borrowers face $76.4bn of dollar bonds

epa05655947 (FILE) A file picture dated 30 July 2014 shows an exterior view of the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) in Singapore. MAS announced in a statement on 02 December 2016, that Standard Chartered's Singapore branch will be fined 5.2 million Singapore dollar (about 3.65 million US dollar), for breaches of MAS' anti-money laundering (AML) requirements over Malaysia's state fund 1MDB (1Malaysia Development Berhad)-related transactions that passed through the bank accounts between the years 2010 and 2013. In the statement, MAS added its intention to issue a prohibition order against former director of Goldman Sachs in Singapore, Tim Leissner, for making false statements on behalf of Goldman Sachs Asia L.L.C., and for his responsibility in managing the bank's relationship with the controversial 1MDB fund from 2012 to 2013.  EPA/WALLACE WOON

 

Bloomberg

Singapore’s commodities-related defaults could turn out to be the canary in the mine.
Despite a modest rebound in resource prices, restructuring specialists including KPMG and Hogan Lovells Lee & Lee see more Asia-Pacific commodities and shipping companies being pushed into delinquency. Law firm DLA Piper said there could be choppy waters ahead on rising interest rates and President-elect Donald Trump’s overhaul of trade with China. Regional non-bank borrowers face $76.4 billion of dollar bonds maturing in 2017, 24 percent more than this year, Bloomberg-compiled data show.
While oil prices have jumped 17 percent since Trump was elected, they are about half what they were in 2014. Resource prices as a whole are down 64 percent from their peak before the 2008 global financial crisis, the Bloomberg Commodity Index shows. Singapore, whose economy relies on shipping and oil service firms, was exposed first because the companies were smaller and less able to tap government support.
“Singapore is a bellwether for the larger Asean and Asian region,” said Andy Ferris, Singapore-based partner at Hogan Lovells Lee & Lee. “Some of the fundamental problems those industries face won’t go away. Many of the companies in the commodities sector have high levels of debt and depressed revenues.”
Five companies in the city, including oil services firms Swiber Holdings Ltd. and Swissco Holdings Ltd., defaulted on nearly S$1 billion ($691 million) of bonds in 2016. KPMG said defaults could widen to include Singapore’s developers after home prices dropped by the most in more than seven years in the three months ended September 30.
China’s overheated housing market cooled in November as authorities rolled out renewed buying curbs.
Payments Due
Real estate firms in the Asia-Pacific region face $8.7 billion of dollar bonds due 2017, while energy-related companies including coal miners and oil services firms must repay $12 billion, Bloomberg-compiled data show.
Commodities trader Noble Group Ltd.’s dollar bonds maturing 2020 traded at 84.2 cents on the dollar on Monday, while oil producer MIE Holdings Corp.’s dollar notes due 2018 traded at 83.3 cents, Bloomberg-compiled data shows.
Graham Martin, head of restructuring at KPMG in Singapore, said he expects more defaults among oil services and shipping firms throughout Asia including countries like Malaysia and Thailand, with rising stress in Indonesia where coal miners face low prices.
“We think Indonesia will be one of the top markets for restructuring work in 2017,” said Martin, who is planning to add headcount in Jakarta.
Mark Fairbairn, Hong Kong-based head of restructuring and special situations for Asia at DLA Piper, counters that Singapore’s issues could turn out to be a “cluster of problematic companies” that do not appear to be of the best quality, he said. He added that the defaults in Singapore may still be a bellwether for more to come in the oil services sector.

Weak Commodities
He also expects more work across the region as rates rise and Trump disrupts trade.
“Across Asia, we could see more corporates getting into difficulty with their bank or bond debt,” said Fairbairn.China’s top policy makers said after a Beijing meeting in mid-December that controlling financial risk to avoid asset bubbles will be a priority for 2017. Hogan Lovells’ Ferris said “inherent government support” may be gradually withdrawn. At least 28 onshore bonds have defaulted this year, compared with seven in 2015.
“I definitely think we will see further distress out of China,” said Ferris. “We have seen a move to allow trading of credit-default swaps and that suggests that the government could allow certain companies just to fail. It’s a fair bet to say we’ll see a sustained level of distress in the bond market throughout Asia next year.”

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