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China’s $150 Billion of Property Debt Restructurings Stumble

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(Bloomberg) — Creditors owed around $150 billion by defaulted Chinese developers always stood to get just pennies back, but many are finding that even after a debt plan is agreed it’s not necessarily a done deal.

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A growing number of builders that passed a seemingly key stage of restructurings in getting court approval for their plans are heading back to square one, after fresh liquidity problems amid a prolonged property crisis made it harder for them to honor their promises.

On Friday, Kaisa Group Holdings Ltd., which carries one of the largest debt loads in the industry, will become the latest Chinese builder to ask a Hong Kong court for approval on its restructuring plan. But even if it gets the nod, the recent experience of its peers shows a daunting path ahead.

Powerlong Real Estate Holdings Ltd., for example, indicated last month that its restructuring deal had lapsed, just two months after Hong Kong’s High Court approved the agreement. Powerlong said that it will continue “working with the offshore creditors and calls for their patience, understanding and support.”

The troubles faced by these companies show the continued risks to Chinese developers even after clearing key steps in the restructuring process. Some larger developers such as Shimao Group Holdings Ltd. and Sino-Ocean Group Holding Ltd. have recently won court sanctions for their debt plans, but they will still need to have enough liquidity to complete the deals.

“It is a combination of ability and intention,” said Una Ge, a partner and managing director at AlixPartners in Hong Kong. Some developers are short on cash to meet payment obligations immediately after a restructuring, but others are seeing diminishing returns from deals agreed upon one or two years ago, making delays in restructuring a “not bad” solution, she added.

Another developer, Yuzhou Group Holdings Co., also got the court’s green light, but it went back to creditors in February saying that it needed more time. The builder will use the next six months “to shore up its liquidity in advance of making the payments due on the restructuring effective date,” Christopher Hunker, a counsel at Linklaters on behalf of Yuzhou, said during a bankruptcy court hearing in New York.

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