Key facts
- Chinese property developers are experiencing a fresh liquidity crunch.
- Vanke, a state-linked developer, requested extensions on two bond repayments totaling nearly 6 billion yuan.
- Analysts believe Beijing is unlikely to provide a full bailout for Vanke.
- Strained local government finances and a policy shift are contributing to the sector's volatility.
- The property crisis, which began in 2021 with Evergrande's default, continues to impact major developers.
Chinese property developers that have undergone debt restructuring are now facing a renewed liquidity squeeze as the property market downturn persists. Vanke, a developer long considered financially stable, has rattled markets by requesting a 12-month delay on a 2 billion yuan bond repayment and an extension on a second note worth 3.7 billion yuan.
Analysts suggest that Beijing is unlikely to fully bail out Vanke, a departure from previous expectations of government support for major state-linked developers. This stance reflects tighter local government finances, which have seen land sales revenues fall significantly, and a broader policy shift away from prioritizing the property sector as the economy's backbone.
Local governments, burdened by debt from infrastructure projects and pandemic-related spending, are increasingly unable to provide unconditional support. Vanke's largest shareholder, state-owned Shenzhen Metro Group, has provided substantial liquidity support since early 2023, but recently requested collateral for previously unsecured loans, signaling a potential shift in its backing.
The prolonged property sector crisis has already led to defaults and liquidations at major developers like China Evergrande Group and Country Garden Holdings. Vanke, while avoiding default until now, has been struggling with liquidity pressures since 2024. The crisis, sparked by overbuilding and new regulations on developer debt limits, has had ripple effects on global markets and foreign investment in China.
