HONG KONG: The grace period for Chinese property developer Country Garden Holding’s US$15mil coupon payment has expired with no word that the money has been paid.
Country Garden did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
If it has missed the payment on a September 2025 bond without coming to a deal with creditors, Country Garden would join scores of other Chinese developers who have defaulted, deepening the crisis roiling the property sector, which makes up about a quarter of the world’s second largest economy.
Payment had not been made by early yesterday, a source familiar with the situation said.
The company last week warned of its inability to meet offshore debt obligations, saying that included “within the relevant grace periods” and adding non-payment may lead to creditors demanding payment acceleration or pursuing enforcement action.
With nearly US$11bil of offshore bonds, a default by Country Garden would set the stage for one of China’s biggest corporate debt restructurings.
Country Garden has also missed other offshore payments in the past few weeks, though those payments still have not seen their 30-day grace periods lapse.
The company is, however, in better shape with its onshore debt, having gained some breathing room with payment extensions.
Last month it won approval from creditors to extend repayment on an onshore bond, the last in the batch of eight bonds it had been seeking extensions for, sources have said.
The eight bonds worth 10.8 billion yuan have each been extended by three years.
A CreditSights report published on Tuesday found China’s state-linked developers could still access funding markets while the private firms were struggling to source new capital.
“With homebuyers still biased towards state-linked developers, those privately run developers still not yet in a default would likely find staying afloat an increasingly challenging prospect, squeezed by both insufficient contracted sales generation and funding inaccessibility,” the report said. — Reuters