HomeNewsWorldCountry Garden signals default, hires advisers as sales plunge

Country Garden signals default, hires advisers as sales plunge

The builder “expects that it will not be able to meet all of its offshore payment obligations when due or within the relevant grace periods, including but not limited to those under the U.S. dollar notes issued by the company,” it said in a filing Tuesday.

October 10, 2023 / 07:15 IST
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Country Garden signals default, hires advisers as sales plunge
Residential buildings under construction at the Phoenix Palace project, developed by Country Garden Holdings Co., in Heyuan, Guangdong province, China, on Thursday, Sept. 21, 2023. Source: Bloomberg

Chinese developer Country Garden Holdings Co. ramped up warnings that it’s set for its first-ever default and hired advisers, the strongest indications yet the company is headed for a restructuring that would be one of the nation’s biggest.

The builder “expects that it will not be able to meet all of its offshore payment obligations when due or within the relevant grace periods, including but not limited to those under the U.S. dollar notes issued by the company,” it said in a filing Tuesday. “Such non-payment may lead to relevant creditors of the Group demanding acceleration of payment of the relevant indebtedness owed to them or pursuing enforcement action.”

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Country Garden, which has become a symbol of China’s broader property debt crisis, said that it had not made a due payment in the amount of HK$470 million ($60 million) “under certain of its indebtedness.” It has missed initial deadlines to pay interest on several bonds in recent weeks, with some grace periods ending later this month. The firm has $11 billion of offshore bonds outstanding, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Once China’s largest developer, Country Garden has been engulfed in a broader property debt crisis and has warned in recent months that it may default. Fresh concerns about broader financial market contagion from China’s property sector flared in August when the firm missed paying interest on dollar bonds by an initial deadline. While it went on to meet those obligations within a grace period, it has since missed more initial deadlines and it had not commented publicly on its prospects for honoring those debts before Tuesday.