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Analysis-Asian
high-yield bond issuers feel Evergrande pain as investors eye better protection
LONDON/HONG KONG : 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 US$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://www.reuters.com/article/china-evergrande-debt-bonds-maturities-idUSL8N2QP1H5
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 US$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://www.reuters.com/world/china/education-bitcoin-chinas-season-regulatory-crackdown-2021-07-27
has already frayed nerves and growth in the economy is slowing has sent bonds
sharply lower.
Foreign investors yanked US$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://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/movankedmpa/Evergrandeper
cent20woesper cent20crushper cent20Chinaper cent20highper cent20yieldper
cent20bonds.PNG
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 160per cent 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 7.5per cent by
end-September.
The 50 major Asian high-yield corporate issuers - who have
US$423 billion in debt outstanding between them - might enjoy a bit of
breathing space for now with just US$2.6 billion maturing until year-end, Fitch
calculates.
But that will soon change when a record US$28.2 billion comes
due in 2022 followed by US$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://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/akvezqbxepr/Fitchper cent20costper
cent20ofper cent20fundingper cent20APACper cent20highper cent20yield.PNG
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 US$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://www.reuters.com/article/us-bonds-index-wgbi-china-idUSKBN2BL351 - 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)
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