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Vanke reprieve still leaves US$1.3 bil debt at risk

Trista Xinyi Luo & Janice Huang / Bloomberg
Trista Xinyi Luo & Janice Huang / Bloomberg • 2 min read
Vanke reprieve still leaves US$1.3 bil debt at risk
China Vanke Co’s woes are posing a growing risk for investors holding US$1.3 billion of the embattled developer’s dollar bonds.
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(Dec 23): China Vanke Co’s woes are posing a growing risk for investors holding US$1.3 billion of the embattled developer’s dollar bonds, as a temporary reprieve this week on local debt still leaves it lurching toward eventual default or restructuring in the absence of any rescue.

Once the country’s largest developer before stumbling under US$50 billion of interest-bearing liabilities and an unprecedented real estate market slump, the Shenzhen‑based firm narrowly avoided default Monday (Dec 22) on a local note. Creditors approved a longer grace period but, in a sign that the days ahead will remain fraught, rejected its proposal to extend principal repayment by 12 months.

If Vanke can’t reach an extension agreement with holders on the two‑billion‑yuan note within the extended grace period or if the firm fails to stave off default on two other local securities in the next few weeks, a cross‑default on its offshore obligations could be triggered, according to a dollar‑bond offering circular seen by Bloomberg.

International investors, including Fidelity International, M&G Investments, HSBC Holdings plc, BlackRock Inc and UBS Group AG, as well as Chinese-controlled investment firm China Asset Management Co were among the top holders of the distressed builder’s two outstanding dollar notes maturing in 2027 and 2029, according to the most recent data compiled by Bloomberg.

The data don’t necessarily reflect current holdings as some might have changed since the filings on which they’re based. Firms may also hold bonds on behalf of clients. Reported holdings of banks may include those held at asset-management subsidiaries.

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