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Chinese property firm Kaisa strikes debt restructuring deal

Thomas Barnes by Thomas Barnes
August 20, 2024
in Economy
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Kaisa was the first of the Chinese property giants to default on dollar-denominated bonds. ©AFP

Beijing (AFP) – Chinese property developer Kaisa has reached an agreement with creditors for partial repayment of its debt, the company said Tuesday, a positive development as it battles to avoid liquidation. Real estate once served as a vital growth engine for the world’s second-largest economy, undergoing two decades of dazzling expansion as living standards rose across the country.

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But the sector has faced unprecedented headwinds in recent years, with major firms failing to follow through on projects and a clampdown on property market speculation by Beijing. Many industry juggernauts are now either on the verge of bankruptcy or in dire financial straits.

Shenzhen-based Kaisa, which has nearly 17,000 employees, in 2015 became the first Chinese real estate group to default on dollar-denominated bonds before charting a financial recovery. But the property crisis of recent years again weakened the firm, whose total debt was estimated at 226.4 billion yuan ($31.7 billion) at the end of 2023.

Kaisa announced Tuesday that it had entered into a “restructuring support agreement” with creditors for a partial repayment of its debt, according to a stock exchange statement in Hong Kong, where it is listed. The firm is now committed to issuing new bonds totalling $5 billion.

The deal comes as other Chinese property giants including Evergrande and Country Garden struggle for survival. Country Garden — a private developer long considered financially sound before buckling under major debt — faces a hearing at a Hong Kong court in January 2025. Unless a plan for restructuring is reached before then, the company could be ordered into liquidation.

© 2024 AFP

Tags: Chinadebtreal estate
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