Baltimore Sun

Officials: Debt controls eased, China real estate rebounding

- By Joe McDonald

BEIJING — China’s vast real estate industry is recovering from a slump triggered by tighter debt controls, a deputy central bank governor said recently, after a wave of defaults by developers rattled global financial markets.

Pan Gongsheng mentioned Evergrande Group, the global industry’s most heavily indebted developer, but gave no update on its government-supervised efforts to restructur­e $305 billion in debt to banks and bondholder­s.

“Market confidence is recovering. Transactio­n activity in the real estate market has increased,” Pan said ahead of the meeting of China’s legislatur­e. “The financing environmen­t, especially for high-quality enterprise­s, has improved significan­tly.”

Pan gave no indication Beijing planned significan­t changes in its debt controls.

China’s economic growth slid in mid-2021 after regulators who worry debt levels are dangerousl­y high blocked Evergrande and other heavily indebted developers from borrowing more money. That added to disruption from anti-virus control policies.

Some developers collapsed, and others defaulted on billions of dollars of debts to Chinese and foreign bond investors. Evergrande has said it has $330 billion in assets but was struggling to convert that into cash to repay lenders.

Local government­s took over some unfinished projects to make sure families got apartments that already were paid for.

In the final quarter of 2022, bond sales by developers rose 22% compared with a year earlier to $17.5 billion, according to Pan. He said bank loans for real estate developmen­t also increased.

Meanwhile, the central bank governor said Beijing plans to keep the exchange rate of its yuan stable after it tumbled to a 14-year low against the U.S. dollar in September.

The exchange rate “will remain basically stable at a reasonable and balanced level,” Yi Gang said at the event with Pan.

The central bank intervened to stop the yuan’s slide after traders shifted money into dollars to profit from Federal Reserve interest rate hikes.

The exchange rate might face further pressure because more U.S. rate hikes are expected to cool economic activity and high inflation while Beijing is easing lending controls to spur economic growth.

A weaker yuan helps Chinese exporters by making their goods cheaper for foreign buyers, but it encourages capital to flow abroad. That raises borrowing costs in China.

The People’s Bank of China allows the yuan to trade within a narrow band around a rate set each morning. The central bank has tried to improve the financial system’s efficiency by making that mechanism more flexible but has backtracke­d to stop big changes in the exchange rate.

Yi, a former economics professor at Indiana University, and other People’s Bank leaders are due to be replaced this month in a once-a-decade change of government that will install supporters of Chinese leader Xi Jinping in key economic posts.

 ?? NG HAN GUAN/AP 2022 ?? The heavily indebted developer of the Evergrande Shanghefu residentia­l complex in Beijing was barred by regulators from borrowing more money in 2021.
NG HAN GUAN/AP 2022 The heavily indebted developer of the Evergrande Shanghefu residentia­l complex in Beijing was barred by regulators from borrowing more money in 2021.

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