Daily Nation Newspaper

Chinese developer misses R2.8bn bond repayment

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BEIJING - Another Chinese property developer said on Monday it had defaulted on a major bond repayment, citing liquidity problems amid a government crackdown on the debt-laden sector.

China's real estate industry - a key growth driver in the world's second-largest economy - has cooled in recent months after Beijing tightened home buying rules and launched a regulatory assault on speculatio­n.

The moves have created headaches for several major developers, notably China Evergrande, the country's second-largest by volume that is weighed down by billions of dollars in debt.

On Monday, Hong Kong-listed Sunshine 100 China Holdings said it had missed a Sunday deadline to make $179 million (~R2.8 billion) in principal and interest payments on a 10.5 percent bond.

The default was due to "liquidity issues arising from the adverse impact of a number of factors including the macroecono­mic environmen­t and the real estate industry," the company said in an exchange filing.

Sunshine 100 has repeatedly struggled to meet its debt obligation­s this year and also defaulted on a bond repayment in August.

The company now has $385 million of outstandin­g dollar notes, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Evergrande - which is drowning in $300 billion of debt - has so far managed to avoid default, but it has dollar bond coupons worth $82.5 million in total due Monday, when a 30-day grace period ends, according to Bloomberg.

On Friday, embattled founder Xu Jiayin was summoned by officials after the company released a statement warning it may not have enough money to "continue to perform its financial obligation­s."

The Guangdong provincial government later said it would send a working group to Evergrande to "supervise and promote enterprise risk management."

Rival developer Kaisa last week said it had failed in a bid for a debt swap that would have bought it crucial time to pay back some of its bonds.

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