• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Analysis-Asian high-yield bond issuers feel Evergrande pain as investors eye better protection

October 6, 2021 by David Barret Leave a Comment

October 6, 2021

By Karin Strohecker and Scott Murdoch

LONDON/HONG KONG (Reuters) – Global investors will probably demand more protection from riskier bond issuers in China and Asia by seeking higher returns and more transparency as a result of Evergrande Group’s financial woes.

Suffocating under $305 billion in debt and teetering on the brink of collapse, property developer Evergrande missed making payments to offshore bondholders twice last month and has not announced plans yet to repay those investors.

It has another eight offshore https://ift.tt/3FlIoYj and one onshore coupon repayments due before year end.

The failure to make payment, followed by a string of credit rating downgrades of indebted Chinese developers, has roiled China’s high-yield debt, sparked outflows and is now making asset managers jittery about issuers in the region, investors and analysts said.

Arthur Lau, Hong Kong-based PineBridge Investments head of Asia ex-Japan, fixed income, thinks the heady mix of debt woes and changing regulations in China is shifting goal posts for foreign investors.

“These uncertainties have caused material impact to the risk appetite for the Chinese assets,” Lau told Reuters. “A higher risk premium may warrant given the unpredictability of policy reforms at the moment.”

Signs of stress in China’s property sector are coming thick and fast: developer Fantasia Holdings failed to pay a $206 million bond due Monday. Its peer Sinic Holdings suffered a ratings downgrades on Tuesday after certain units missed interest payments on onshore financing arrangements.

Uncertainty over when and if authorities will step in to cushion the contagion risk from Evergrande at a time when Beijing’s regulatory crackdown https://ift.tt/3smTW7L has already frayed nerves and growth in the economy is slowing has sent bonds sharply lower.

Foreign investors yanked $8.1 billion out of Chinese debt in September – the largest outflow in six months – while emerging market fixed income ex-China enjoyed inflows, data from the Institute of International Finance showed.

Much of the pain is concentrated in high yield firms in the country: ICE BofA’s China high yield index has lost around a quarter since the start of the year while the global benchmark and China investment grade peers barely budged.

Graphic: Evergrande woes crush China high yield bonds https://ift.tt/2YoG7eq

Analysts say the sharp losses for Chinese junk bonds reflected both default risk and uncertainty over how to value bonds given the unclear picture of how Evergrande debt may be restructured and authorities’ ability to stop the spread to other firms.

Standing at 160% of gross domestic predict (GDP), China’s non-financial corporate debt is higher than the advanced economy average and ratings agencies have regularly flagged asset quality as a concern, said Adam Slater at Oxford Economics.

“How much of the recent rise in risk premia prove to be permanent is as yet unclear,” he said, adding much would hinge on the success of Chinese authorities at containing financial contagion from Evergrande.

Pressure has been felt outside the property sector, too.

Bonds maturing in five years and issued by West China Cement, aluminium producer China Hongqiao Group and leasing firm Ehi Car have seen their yields jump by more than 1 percentage point since end-August.

WALL OF MATURITY

Evergrande’s reverberations are being felt beyond China. Ratings agency Fitch calculates that funding costs for Asia Pacific junk-rated corporate issuers have risen by more than 1 percentage point to 7.5% by end-September.

The 50 major Asian high-yield corporate issuers – who have $423 billion in debt outstanding between them – might enjoy a bit of breathing space for now with just $2.6 billion maturing until year-end, Fitch calculates.

But that will soon change when a record $28.2 billion comes due in 2022 followed by $28.7 billion in 2023, the ratings agency said in its latest report.

The group is dominated by China and the real estate sector, but also contains firms from India and Malaysia to Mongolia.

Graphic: Fitch cost of funding APAC high yield https://ift.tt/3Ae3K5Z

Analysts also predict the latest events will sharpen a push by investors for more favourable conditions.

“The lasting impact in terms of pricing might come in the form of investor insistence on improved company transparency and disclosures,” said Jim Veneau, AXA Investment Management head of Asia fixed income.

Philip Lee, head of debt capital markets for Asia Pacific at DLA Piper, expects to see “demand for tighter covenants in bond documentation as well as greater focus on group guarantees and asset security.

Given the sheer size of China’s bond market at $16 trillion, comparatively high yields and increasing importance in global indexes and financial markets, some bet that investors will see through the current turmoil in the near future.

This month will see the start of the inclusion of Chinese government bonds in the FTSE Russell WGBI index https://ift.tt/3cBPD23 – a widely followed fixed income benchmark – that could see large amounts of passive investments flow into the country’s debt markets.

“In the long-term, we believe this market is simply too vast to ignore,” said PineBridge’s Lau.

(Reporting by Karin Strohecker in London and Scott Murdoch in Hong Kong, additional reporting by Tom Westbrook in Singapore and Tom Arnold in London; Editing by Sumeet Chatterjee and Kim Coghill)

Source Link Analysis-Asian high-yield bond issuers feel Evergrande pain as investors eye better protection

David Barret
David Barret

Related posts:

  1. Printify bags $45M, led by Index, to ride the custom printing boom
  2. Cathay Pacific to close London pilot base, review U.S. bases
  3. Latin America’s second wave of digital transformation
  4. Recruiting operations platform ModernLoop lands $3.3M to create better technical hiring experiences

Filed Under: News

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

  • IFLScience The Big Questions: Would You Rather Go To Space Or The Bottom Of The Sea?
  • Cup Of Water On Tiangong Space Station Sparks Bizarre Conspiracy Theories
  • Simulations Of Early Solar Systems Find Up To 40 Percent Chance That Planet Nine Exists
  • The Last Time NASA’s Voyager “Looked Back” At Our Solar System, This Is What It Saw
  • What Are Those Tiny Dots On Apples?
  • Homo Erectus And Neanderthals May Have Been The First Humans To Do Math
  • Portuguese Man O’ War Found To Be Four Species Not One After 250 Years
  • Revolutionary Drug That’s “Closest Thing” To HIV Vaccine Gets FDA Approval
  • This Is Your Brain On ChatGPT: Lower Neural Interconnectivity And “Soulless” Work
  • In November 2026, A Human-Made Object Will Reach A Light-Day From Earth For First Time In History
  • Alan Turing Masterpieces “Almost Shredded” By Owners Fetch $625,000 At Auction
  • Salton Sea: California’s Largest And Most Polluted Lake Is Even More Toxic Than Thought
  • Sharks Follow A Fundamental Law Of Geometry, And That’s A Really Big Deal
  • “Swarm Intelligence” Sees Longhorn Crazy Ants Clear The Path For Nestmates
  • Cave Remains Reveal Earliest Evidence Of Ice Age Indigenous Australians At High Altitude
  • Scientists Have Finally Identified A Denisovan Skull – It’s Been Hiding In Plain Sight Since 1933
  • Thought Horns Were Just For Cows? This Striking Triple-Horned Chameleon Proves Otherwise
  • Elon Musk’s Starship Doesn’t Even Have To Fly To Explode Now
  • How Do We Know The Bible’s Forbidden Fruit Was An Apple?
  • Your Genetic Ancestry Is Probably Not What You Think It Is
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version