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Kaisa sells Hong Kong property stake at steep discount and seeks debt exchange to avoid default

  • Joint venture of New World Development and Far East International to buy development at old Kai Tak airport site
  • Kaisa is seeking to exchange nearly US$400 million in bonds set to mature on December 7

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Construction at the site of the former runway of the Kai Tak airport.  Photo: Martin Chan

Kaisa Group Holdings has agreed to sell its stake in a development at the old Kai Tak airport site at a steep discount and is asking bondholders to exchange another US$400 million of notes set to mature next month, as the heavily indebted Chinese developer tries to stave off default.

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The Shenzhen-based developer’s shares jumped nearly 14 per cent to close at HK$1.15 in Hong Kong on Thursday following the announcements, their biggest one-day percentage surge in more than two years. It was the first time its shares had traded in three weeks after having lost almost 70 per cent – or HK$9 billion (US$1.2 billion) – in market value over the past three months as its cash crunch worsened.

Kaisa, which was downgraded by Fitch last week to “C” from “CCC-”, also officially confirmed it had missed about US$88 million in interest payments on its offshore debt due on November 11 and November 12. Both junk-rated bonds have a 30-day grace period, after which the company will face a default on the aggregate US$1.5 billion in notes.

“The company is in the process of assessing the repayment obligations of the group with the objective of formulating an overall plan taking into account the interests of all its stakeholders, to address the liquidity issue,” it said in a stock exchange filing late on Wednesday.

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The group has US$11.4 billion of outstanding bonds coming due in 2026, and US$200 million of perpetual notes, according to Bloomberg data. Some of them are trading well below their face value at price levels typically associated with defaulted securities.

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