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China property woes deepen with Vanke slump, Country Garden halt

- Bloomberg.

ONE of China’s biggest property firms delayed its earnings report while another posted a record profit decline as the nation’s real estate crisis shows no signs of easing.

Country Garden Holdings Co, once the nation’s top residentia­l builder by sales, made a surprise announceme­nt late Thursday that it will miss a deadline for reporting annual results, saying it needs more informatio­n. China Vanke Co, at one time the largest listed developer, says net profit tumbled 46% last year, the biggest drop since its 1991 listing.

The dire statements, along with a jump in bad loans at some banks, underscore how a weak economy and sluggish consumer confidence continue to weigh on home sales in the world’s second-biggest economy.

Annual price declines deepened in February for both new and used homes, highlighti­ng the challenge for authoritie­s as they try to salvage the beleaguere­d market.

China’s property sector “will likely register the first time net loss since our coverage,” says Raymond Cheng, head of China property research at CGS Internatio­nal Securities HK.

“We remain cautious on the sector until developers’ sales improve.”

The downturn has spared few firms, be it private or state-backed. Country Garden and Vanke were both hailed as likely survivors just a year ago.

Country Garden roiled markets when it defaulted on its dollar debt in October and Vanke is fighting to stave off default through negotiatio­n with insurers on debt.

Country Garden expects to delay publishing its 2023 results beyond the March 31 deadline imposed by regulators. The delay will likely result in a suspension of trading on April 2 when the Hong Kong market reopens after Easter, the firm said in a filing.

The postponeme­nt signals the developer’s troubles are entering a new chapter after a Hong Kong court received a creditor’s petition to wind up the company following the default on dollar debt. The company also missed a coupon payment on a yuan bond this month for the first time.

The move “suggests new impediment­s to its restructur­ing, with any delays to its debt plan likely to fuel concerns of lawsuit risk,” says Bloomberg Intelligen­ce analyst Kristy Hung, in a research note.

Country Garden says it needs time to collect more informatio­n so it can “make appropriat­e accounting estimates and judgments, and reasonably reflect changes in the industry,” according to the filing.

Vanke, meanwhile, says net income attributab­le to shareholde­rs shrank to 12.2 billion yuan for 2023. The drop dwarfs a 14% slide expected by analysts surveyed by The giant builder aims to cut debt by more than 100 billion yuan in the next two years as it “firmly deleverage­s.” Vanke didn’t propose a cash or stock dividend, skipping a full-year payout for the first time since its 1991 listing in the China market.

Vanke’s stock stumbled as much as 3.8% yesterday to nearly a decade low in Shenzhen.

Deeply distressed level

Some of its longer-dated bonds recently traded near 40 US cents, approachin­g deeply distressed levels. Vanke has a Us$600mil bond due in June trading above 90 US cents, indicating less investor concern about repayment in the short-term.

Vanke has enough financing support from banks, the company’s President Zhu Jiusheng says in an online briefing, adding that it has 26 banking partners.

Together with mid-sized developers, the former giants offer a glimpse into the sector’s worst earnings season ever as the real estate slump enters a fourth year.

Among 23 property developers that have released earnings, 14 announced a net loss and six reported shrinking profit, Bloomberg calculatio­ns show. Just three saw a mild profit gain.

The protracted property downturn has also eroded the balance sheets of the largest state banks as their bad loans creep up, suggesting a spillover to the financial sector.

Beijing tasked state-owned banks with helping pump up the domestic economy as well as supporting debt-laden property developers.

Bank of Communicat­ions Co reports that its property bad loan ratio jumped to 4.99% at the end of last year from 2.8% a year earlier. Bigger rival Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd’s bad loans from residentia­l mortgages rise 9.6%. Agricultur­al Bank of China Ltd reports a 4.7% increase in soured residentia­l mortgage loans last year.

Home sales drought

A persistent home sales drought has endangered an increasing­ly larger group of developers. The residentia­l sales slump deepened in February even as price declines eased slightly on a month-on-month basis. The sales weakness has prompted some global credit raters to downgrade some of the firms into junk territory, including Vanke and Longfor Group Holdings Ltd.

Fitch Ratings has cut forecasts for the housing market, now expecting a 5% to 10% fall in new home sales this year amid weaker home-buying demand. The ratings firm previously estimated a 0% to 5% decline. — Bloomberg

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