CORRECTED-UPDATE 1-Developer Greentown China plans additional dollar bonds to refinance debt

Reuters
18 Feb
CORRECTED-UPDATE 1-Developer Greentown China plans additional dollar bonds to refinance debt

Corrects headline and story to make clear that $350 million is the bond size sold last week

By Clare Jim, Rishav Chatterjee

Feb 18 (Reuters) - Greentown China 3900.HK on Tuesday said it proposed to issue additional dollar bonds to help refinance its existing borrowings, after offering the first dollar bond sale in the sector in two years last week.

The state-backed property developer last week said it sold $350 million worth of 8.45% senior notes due in 2028, the first dollar bond sale by a Chinese property developer since early 2023, in a sign that some investor appetite for speculative-grade China property debt could be returning.

The additional bonds will have the same tenor and coupon, Hangzhou-based Greentown said in a filing, while the aggregate principal amount and the issue price are yet to be determined. The proceeds from the new issues will be used partly to fund the repurchase of two of its dollar bonds.

The developer last week offered to buy back $741 million of outstanding bonds due in April 2025 and July 2025. The firm will determine the maximum acceptance amount of the repurchase after the offer expires on February 20.

The Hong Kong-listed company's refinancing comes amid heightened investor caution following a spate of defaults in China's property sector where residential and commercial markets continued to struggle.

S&P Global Ratings said in a note on Friday that Greentown's proposed notes could boost the developer's liquidity and provide room for new investments.

S&P added that the issue showed Greentown's access to funding channels might be expanding beyond onshore bonds and onshore banks, noting that it had issued 1 billion yuan ($137.37 million) of onshore bonds in January.

Deutsche Bank and HSBC are the joint bookrunners of the proposed additional notes offering.

($1 = 7.2797 Chinese yuan renminbi)

(Reporting by Rishav Chatterjee in Bengaluru and Clare Jim in Hong Kong; Editing by Mrigank Dhaniwala and Kate Mayberry)

((Rishav.Chatterjee@thomsonreuters.com;))

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