Evergrande tumbles further after S&P says default is likely

China Evergrande Group slid deeper in equity and credit markets Tuesday, fueling concerns about broader contagion after S&P Global Ratings said the developer is on the brink of default.

The distressed developer’s shares in Hong Kong dropped as much as 7% after closing Monday at the lowest in about a decade. Its 8.25% dollar bond due 2022 fell 0.3 cent to 24.9 cents, leaving it down some 75% since late May, according to prices compiled by Bloomberg. The junk-rated company is the biggest issuer of high-yield notes in Asia.

“We believe Beijing would only be compelled to step in if there is a far-reaching contagion causing multiple major developers to fail and posing systemic risks to the economy,” according to an S&P report dated Sept. 20. “Evergrande failing alone would unlikely result in such a scenario.”

Still, troubles could further hit investor confidence in China’s property sector and junk-rated credit markets more broadly, the credit assessor said. Contagion has fueled a global selloff. In Asia Tuesday, even high-grade dollar bonds slumped, leaving spreads set for the worst two-day expansion since April. A drop in stocks also continued, though pockets of the market including property shares in Hong Kong bounced after plunging Monday.

Evergrande Chairman Hui Ka Yan told staff that he firmly believes the company will step out of the darkest moment soon, Securities Times reported, citing a company letter. The developer will accelerate full-on resumption of construction to ensure handing over of buildings, it said. An Evergrande spokesperson confirmed the authenticity of the letter.

Investors are weighing policy tightening in China that’s hit the property sector in the past year through the “three red lines” effort to restrain debt growth. Debate has spread about how much the government may help as markets reel, after it took months for plans to emerge for China Huarong Asset Management Co., one of the country’s major managers of distressed assets.

Evergrande’s saga is coming to a head at a time when liquidity is low amid public holidays in China and other countries in Asia. Chinese authorities previously told major lenders not to expect repayment of interest on bank loans due this week. Interest also comes due Thursday on two of the developer’s bonds. —

Bloomberg