China Vanke shares, bonds fall after rating cut and government probe

Published Thu, Apr 11, 2024 · 07:05 PM

CHINA Vanke’s shares and US dollar bonds dropped on Thursday (Apr 11) after S&P stripped its investment-grade status and the developer confirmed reports that an executive was being investigated, adding to woes for the embattled property sector.

Vanke’s Shenzhen-listed stock closed down 1.8 per cent at 7.4 yuan after dropping in early trade to 7.31 yuan – the lowest since May 2014. Its Hong-Kong listed stock was down 1.9 per cent at HK$4.14, having earlier fallen 3.8 per cent to a record low of HK$4.06.

Vanke’s US dollar bonds fell, with bidding on one tranche due December 2025 quoted around 66.3 in late trade, about five cents lower from Wednesday, Duration Finance data showed.

S&P slashed its rating of China’s second-biggest developer by sales by three notches to BB+ from BBB+, one rung into “junk” territory, becoming the last of the major credit-rating firms to render Vanke’s credit “non-investment grade”.

It blamed Vanke’s “weakening competitive position and surging leverage” and gave the new rating a “negative outlook”.

Meanwhile, China media reported on Wednesday a general manager of Vanke’s Jinan branch, in the eastern Chinese province of Shandong, named Xiao Jin had been taken away by police for investigation, fuelling concerns among investors.

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In a statement to Reuters on Thursday, Vanke said: “Xiao Jin is cooperating with investigations by relevant department for his personal matters.”

The firm was operating normally, the statement said. Xiao’s role had been taken over by a separate executive and the statement referred to information disclosed by “relevant government department” for updates.

Vanke is likely able to make debt payments this year, S&P said. Still, it said sales were likely to continue to fall over the next 12 months amid a property market slump.

The developer is gasping for funding. It reported a 50.6 per cent drop in 2023 core profit, and saw sales in the first two months of 2024 fall below its monthly break-even point.

It has been negotiating with banks and insurers for new loans and extended debt maturities, Reuters reported last month.

Vanke last month said it would boost cash flow by slashing debt and increasing income from businesses other than property development. It assured investors that Shenzhen authorities were coordinating with state firms to help with financing.

“We believe that weakening contracted sales and margins will undermine China Vanke’s competitive position,” S&P said, estimating contracted sales of 270 billion (S$50.5 billion) to 280 billion yuan on a total basis in 2024 to 2026, down 25 per cent to 28 per cent on last year and 60 per cent from a 2020 peak.

S&P flagged a possible downgrade last month, days after Moody’s became the first to put Vanke credit into the junk category. Fitch followed less than a week later. REUTERS

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