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The First Test for Evergrande's Debt Crisis Comes This Week

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  • Evergrande is due to pay out interest worth $83 million on a 5-year, U.S.-dollar denominated bond, with an initial issue size of around $2 billion. Another interest payment on a 7-year dollar bond is due next Wednesday, on Sept. 29.
  • Analysts and market watchers largely expect that Evergrande to miss the interest payment on Thursday.
  • If these initial defaults happen, institutional and other foreign investors will likely be more affected compared to domestic investors in China, analysts say.

The first test for Evergrande's debt crisis comes this week — investors will be watching to see if the embattled Chinese property developer is able to pay out its interest due on a bond, or default on it.

The firm is due to pay interest worth $83 million on Thursday, according to data from S&P Global Ratings.

Evergrande's 5-year, U.S.-dollar denominated bond, had an initial issue size of around $2 billion, according to market data provider Refinitiv Eikon – although the price has plummeted now.

Yields on this bond have skyrocketed to 560%, from just over 10% earlier this year, according to Refinitiv Eikon. The bond is due to mature in March 2022.

Another interest payment on a 7-year U.S. dollar bond is due next Wednesday.

"What happens on Thursday promises to be a seminal event for markets, one way or the other, bigger perhaps than the FOMC outcome which will have occurred just a few hours before," Ray Attrill, head of foreign exchange strategy at the National Australia Bank, told CNBC. He was referring to the U.S. central bank's meetings which are closely watched by investors.

Analysts and market watchers largely expect Evergrande to miss the interest payment on Thursday. However, it will not technically default unless it fails to make that payment within 30 days.

S&P Global Ratings said Monday that a default was "likely."

"Fact is, Evergrande is already in technical default having missed bank interest payment," said Vishnu Varathan, head of economics and strategy at Mizuho Bank. He was referring to reports that the Chinese government told major banks that the real estate giant will not be able to pay interest on its loans that were due earlier this week on Monday.

"With risks of missing a bond coupon later this week, the capacity to spook capital markets remains significant; considering Evergrande accounts for ~11% of all Asia high-yield bonds," Varathan wrote in a note on Tuesday.

Foreign investors, offshore bonds may be hit first

If these initial defaults happen, institutional and other foreign investors will likely be more affected compared to domestic investors in China, analysts said.

It's possible that onshore, yuan-denominated bonds may take priority over offshore, dollar denominated bonds. Offshore bonds are mostly held by institutional or foreign investors, whereas domestic retail investors in China are more likely to own onshore bonds.

"Clearly, the optics of bond investors getting paid when retail wealth management product holders and home-buyers are a long way off clarity, much less, resolution, do not sit well," Varathan told CNBC in an email.

The case for treating the obligations owed to retail investors of wealth management products more favorably is therefore "strong given the social stability angles on this," he said.

Protests by angry homebuyers and investors have broken out in recent week in some cities, and social unrest is a key concern.

Last week, around 100 investors turned up at Evergrande's headquarters in Shenzhen, demanding repayment of loans on overdue financial products — forming chaotic scenes, according to Reuters.

The priority on domestic investors will therefore have implications on the default risks for offshore dollar-denominated bonds — mostly held by institutional or other foreign investors — versus onshore bonds, mostly held by domestic investors.

"An additional point of interest though is whether the coupon due on offshore bonds will get a less preferential treatment to onshore bond coupons — especially given the asymmetric arrangement whereby offshore default does not trigger cross-default (whereas onshore default triggers cross-default for offshore)," Varathan told CNBC. A cross default occurs when a default triggered in one situation spreads to other obligations, leading to a broader contagion.

"In other words, will Evergrande choose to just default on offshore bonds while honouring onshore commitments?" Varathan asked.

That prediction may well ring true. On Wednesday, Evergrande unit Hengda Real Estate said it would make an interest payment for an onshore bond — worth $35.88 million — that's due on Thursday, according to Reuters. This bond is set to mature in September 2025.

No mention has yet been made to whether the developer will pay out the interest due on the March 2022 offshore bond on Thursday, which investors are keenly watching.

Which funds own Evergrande bonds?

UBS, HSBC and Blackrock have been accumulating Evergrande bonds over the past few months, according to Morningstar Direct data.

"We've seen a few funds adding to China Evergrande between July and August 2021, given widening spreads and attractive valuations," said Patrick Ge, manager research analyst at Morningstar.

Here are the top funds with the highest exposure to Evergrande bonds, according to Morningstar.

  • Fidelity Asian High-Yield Fund
  • UBS (Lux) BS Asian High Yield (USD)
  • HSBC Global Investment Funds - Asia High Yield Bond XC
  • Pimco GIS Asia High Yield Bond Fund
  • Blackrock BGF Asian High Yield Bond Fund
  • Allianz Dynamic Asian High Yield Bond

CNBC's Brittany Dawe contributed to this report.

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