• 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-Evergrande woes to take toll on China property sale and drive M&A

September 24, 2021 by David Barret Leave a Comment

September 24, 2021

By Clare Jim

HONG KONG (Reuters) – The debt crisis engulfing China Evergrande Group has begun to dent homebuyer sentiment and force developers to cut prices, signalling deeper consequences for the world’s No.2 economy and a consolidation in the overcrowded property sector.

Evergrande, which epitomises the borrow-to-build business model, is suffocating under $305 billion of debt and has stopped repaying some investors and suppliers and halted building work at many projects across the country.

What has rapidly become China’s biggest corporate headache has now smashed consumer confidence in property investment, as cash-strapped Evergrande struggles to complete home developments for buyers.

While contagion fears from a possible Evergrande collapse have depressed global financial markets, analysts say the property sector, which accounts for a quarter of the country’s gross domestic product, could be the worst hit.

“It’s not China’s Lehman moment that we should be worried about. It’s a sharp drop in property sales,” Capital Economics chief Asia economist Mark Williams said, referring to the 2008 collapse of U.S. investment bank Lehman Brothers.

On Friday, Evergrande inched closer to the potential default that investors fear, missing a payment deadline in one of the clearest indications yet that the developer, whose debt struggles have spooked markets, is in dire trouble.

The developer is now repaying some suppliers, as well as retail investors in its opaque wealth management products, partly in completed real estate in an effort to ease social tensions.

“It’s not the first time a developer has used real estate as payment to suppliers,” said realtor Centaline Shenzhen general manager Alan Cheng. “But it’s the first time homebuyers realize a big developer like Evergrande can collapse too – they think there must be something wrong with this market.”

He said buyer sentiment had turned pessimistic, resulting in low transaction volumes and confirming a market downtrend.

Adding pressure to home prices, Cheng said other developers, including Kaisa and state-backed China Resources Land, cut selling prices in the southern city of Shenzhen, after a 30% discount promotion by Evergrande in May.

Kaisa said it did not have a comment on price cuts, while China Resources Land did not respond to request for comment.

Growth in China’s property sales by floor area in the first eight months slowed to 15.9% from a year earlier, compared to 21.5% growth in the first seven months, as the sector was hard hit by a liquidity squeeze. Growth was 105% year-on-year in the first two months of 2021, rising from a low base in 2020 when sales were hurt by the COVID-19 pandemic.

CONSOLIDATION DRIVE

Nomura said the decline in new home sales accelerated in the first two weeks of September from August to 16%, and 49.5% from a year earlier for top and lower tier cities, while they eased to 15.5% for tier-2 cities.

Capital Economics’ senior China economist, Julian Evans-Pritchard, said Evergrande’s crisis had had a much bigger impact on housing demand than he had anticipated, and households had turned much more cautious, triggering a drop in prices.

He said that while most developers would be able to cope with weaker sales for six months, a broader shift in property sales triggered by the negative sentiment would be more worrying.

To withstand the crisis, the sector was expected to see a wave of consolidation in the near-term, some analysts said.

China’s property market has been extremely fragmented, with an estimated more than 50,000 developers at the peak. Given many were small and poor quality, Beijing also wants to drive consolidation, analysts said.

No.3 developer China Vanke and Guangzhou-based KWG Group said in their earnings conferences last month they were eyeing M&A to acquire land from distressed peers, when prices are often cheaper than at public land auctions.

Vanke said it had been in talks with Evergrande in the past few months on project cooperations, and it has acquired three projects of Sichuan Languang Development, a smaller developer that defaulted in July.

Country Garden Services, the property management unit of developer Country Garden, said on Monday it had agreed to buy Wealth Best Global, an arm of Guangzhou R&F Properties Co, for 10 billion yuan ($1.55 billion).

“Consolidation will definitely accelerate under the current tight credit environment,” said an executive of a developer based in eastern China, adding it was looking at a few projects now.

“If a company in a liquidity crunch doesn’t sell its assets quickly when the problem first emerges, it may collapse like Evergrande,” said the executive, declining to be named as he was not authorised to speak to the media.

(Reporting by Clare Jim; Editing by Sumeet Chatterjee and Nick Macfie)

Source Link Analysis-Evergrande woes to take toll on China property sale and drive M&A

David Barret
David Barret

Related posts:

  1. Afghans still fleeing rural homes despite fall in violence – UN migration agency
  2. Hamilton and Verstappen will not back off, says Brawn
  3. Fox Entertainment acquires TMZ from AT&T-owned WarnerMedia
  4. Australian home prices jump record 6.7% in Q2

Filed Under: News

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

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

Primary Sidebar

  • Fossil Mystery Reveals New Species Of 85-Million-Year-Old Sea Monster, And It’s “Very Odd”
  • Can’t Handle The Heat? A Potential “Anti-Spice” Could Tame Spicy Food
  • We Now Know When Denisovans, Neanderthals, And Modern Humans Inhabited Denisova Cave
  • Tailless Alligator Shocks Passersby On Highway In Southern Louisiana
  • What Is Trump’s “Golden Dome” Missile System And How Would It Actually Work?
  • Geophagia – Why Some People Eat Soil, And Whether You Should Try It Too (Spoiler: No)
  • Rare Moonlit Night On Mars Captured By Perseverance
  • This Strange, Supergiant Amphipod Inhabits Up To 59 Percent Of The World’s Seabed
  • The Pineal Gland Is Mysterious, But It’s Probably Not A Psychic “Third Eye”
  • New Contact Lenses Give You Infrared Vision Even With Your Eyes Shut
  • Only 2 Species Of This “Living Fossil” Exist – And 1 Was Just Photographed In The Wild For The First Time
  • New Sun Images At 8K Resolution Show Astounding, Never-Before-Seen Details
  • Why Do Ostriches Have Four Kneecaps If They Only Have Two Legs?
  • Toad In The Hole: The Myth And Mystery Of The Living Frogs Entombed In Rocks
  • Newest Member Of The Solar System Just Announced – And It’s In An Extreme Orbit
  • Meet Walckenaer’s Studded Triangular Spider And The Rest Of Its Triangular Family
  • World’s Largest Cliff-Top Boulder Was Rolled From 30-Meter-High Cliff By Ancient Tsunami
  • Flowers Have Been Blooming On Earth For 2 Million Years Longer Than We Thought
  • New Species Of Flapjack Octopus, A Shape-Shifting Cephalopod Of The Deep, Found In Australia
  • Galaxy Blasts Its Companion With Radiation In Never-Before-Seen “Cosmic Joust”
  • 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