Chinese developer Country Garden has delayed the deadline for bondholders to vote on extending payment on a 3.9 billion yuan note by three years.
Shares of Country Garden are expected to increase by 14.8% after selling a minority stake in a mixed development in Guangzhou for 1.3 billion yuan ($178.35 million) and extending a creditor voting deadline to delay repayment for an onshore private bond worth 3.9 billion yuan.
Chinese developer Country Garden reassured investors that its $100 billion project in Malaysia is proceeding as planned and that it has sufficient assets, despite concerns about its financial strength and missed coupon payments. The company's projects in Malaysia are operating normally and its overall operation in the region is "safe and stable," according to a statement from its Singapore and Malaysia unit. Malaysia's central bank also stated that the current situation with Country Garden is not expected to have a material impact on the property market in Malaysia.
China's troubled real estate company Country Garden plans to raise funds to avoid default and repay its loans, amid concerns that its liquidity crisis could have a wider impact on China's economy.
China's real estate market is facing a potential crisis as Country Garden, once the country's largest property developer, experiences financial strains and missed payments, raising concerns about its impact on the Chinese economy and global stability.
Country Garden, China's largest private developer, has obtained approval from its creditors to extend payments for an onshore private bond, providing relief for the embattled company and the crisis-ridden property sector.
Country Garden Holdings, once a leading player in China's property industry, is facing a severe cash crunch that could have more extensive implications for the economy than the default of Evergrande Group, as its declining stock and bond values threaten to trigger broader damage to the real estate sector and consumer confidence.
China's largest private property developer, Country Garden, made interest payments on its U.S. dollar bonds just hours before the grace period deadline, avoiding default for the second time in four days and providing relief to the crisis-hit property sector.
Embattled developer Country Garden faces a new round of voting by creditors to extend several debt maturities, as it continues to navigate the crisis-hit Chinese property sector and avoid default.
China's largest private property developer, Country Garden, has won approval from its creditors to extend repayment on six onshore bonds by three years, providing relief to the country's crisis-hit property sector.
Country Garden's $100 billion Forest City development in Malaysia, which aims to house 700,000 people, is facing scrutiny from creditors as the cash-strapped developer struggles to meet its debt liabilities and generate revenue from the project.
Embattled Chinese developer Country Garden is facing a deadline to pay $15 million in interest on an offshore bond, with concerns growing over its ability to meet its debt obligations amid a struggling property sector and weak property sales in China. If the payment is not made within the 30-day grace period, the principal will become due immediately and trigger cross-default terms on other credit. Some offshore creditors have already begun talks with law firms, indicating a potential debt restructuring.
Sunac and Country Garden, two major Chinese developers, have secured debt deals with creditors, providing some relief to the crisis-hit property sector; however, the recovery of home sales remains uncertain.
Chinese property developer Country Garden has received bondholders' approval to extend repayments on one of its local notes.