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Evergrande Pain Spreads to Wealthy Investors as More Interest Payments Missed

Tens of thousands of Chinese households who bought high-yield investments risk being sucked into the unraveling of Evergrande.

<div class="paragraphs"><p>High-rise apartment buildings at China Evergrande Group in Taicang. (Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg)</p></div>
High-rise apartment buildings at China Evergrande Group in Taicang. (Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg)

Tens of thousands of Chinese households who bought high-yield investments risk being sucked into the spectacular unraveling of China Evergrande Group after the embattled developer missed payments on funds sold through shadow banks, which have funneled billions into its construction projects.

Some of these lenders, known as trusts, have already dipped into their own pockets to repay wealthy investors on Evergrande’s behalf, according to people familiar with the matter. Others are negotiating payment extensions with Evergrande, said the people, asking not to be identified discussing private matters. It’s not clear how much of the funds are in arrears and there’s no evidence that trusts are passing payment delays on to customers who bought fixed-income products tied to Evergrande.

Already, missed payments on 40 billion yuan ($6.2 billion) of wealth products sold by Evergrande itself to retail investors have sparked nationwide protests, putting more pressure on Beijing to find a solution and avoid further unrest. Contagion into the $3 trillion trust industry will put at risk many more investors, while also threatening the biggest source of non-bank funding for the property sector as shadow banks retreat. 

Evergrande Pain Spreads to Wealthy Investors as More Interest Payments Missed

“The Chinese government will place social stability as one of the priorities,” said James Feng, the founding partner of Poseidon Capital Group, a Chinese fund that specializes in distressed and special situation investments.

The clock is ticking for Evergrande to make these investors whole. The cash-strapped firm faces repayments in the fourth quarter on $1.8 billion of high-yield products sold through trusts to wealthy clients and institutions. Another $4 billion is due next year, according to data provider Use Trust.

The Chinese government, concerned about preserving financial stability, has pushed Evergrande to meet its many obligations. In a recent meeting, regulators urged the company to complete unfinished housing projects and repay retail investors, while averting a default on its dollar bonds. Evergrande’s billionaire Chairman Hui Ka Yan meanwhile told staff last week that buyers of its investment products will be repaid, the company said.

Yet with more than $300 billion in liabilities and cash flow shrinking, it’s not clear how Hui can pull that off. The company already missed a Sept. 23 deadline to make an $83.5 million coupon payment on a $2 billion bond maturing in March. The firm is also subject to heightened restrictions on its bank accounts as regulators ensure it uses cash to complete housing projects and not to pay creditors. The stock and bonds are reeling.

Evergrande Pain Spreads to Wealthy Investors as More Interest Payments Missed

Evergrande's 8.25% bond due 2022 indicated down 0.5 cent on the dollar Monday at 28.4 cents, according to Bloomberg-compiled prices. The stock rose 2.5% in Hong Kong, paring its decline to 84% this year.

Evergrande’s dependence on trusts and other asset management products began growing after banks were directed to cut back on their lending to the property sector. By the end of 2019, Evergrande had done business with most of the 68 trust companies in China, which accounted for 41% of its total financing, based on the last borrowing disclosure. 

In response to Evergrande’s financial troubles, the trust firms grew more cautious last year, with some accepting only one of dozens of proposals from the developer, often funding less than half the project value, the people said. 

Trusts are also reducing their exposure to other property firms, a sign that Evergrande’s woes threaten the entire real estate industry, which accounts for more than 15% of China’s economy. The trusts have cut outstanding loans to property firms by 201 billion yuan in the first half of this year, a drop of 17%, according to the trust association.

Despite this, trusts remain Evergrande’s biggest source of direct debt, outweighing bank borrowings and bonds, said Christopher Yip, a senior director at S&P Global Ratings. “They are also the biggest trust borrower in the property sector.” 

Evergrande Pain Spreads to Wealthy Investors as More Interest Payments Missed

When trusts began pulling back, the developer started squeezing money from more murky sources -- selling its own high-yield wealth products to staff, homebuyers and others. The money wasn’t raised in Evergrande’s name to side-step regulations and keep borrowings off its books, leaving some analysts to speculate on whether there are hidden obligations that are yet to surface. 

Evergrande didn’t shy away from aggressive sales tactics. As the stock and bonds began to crater this year, it sent out a clear directive to employees: find buyers for the company’s high-yield investment funds or your job could be at risk.
 
Many staff complied, not only buying the products for themselves, but encouraging friends and family to do the same. An employee promotion sent to workers in Liaoning province in July had these investment goals: 100,000 yuan ($15,000) per employee, up to 10 times that for executives. Managers would be rewarded -- or fined -- based on meeting the targets, and the purchases would be “important evidence” of performance, according to a memo seen by Bloomberg News.

Two months later, angry employees and investors joined protests after the developer failed to make payments on the products, some of which offered yields as high as 10%.

One fund investor, who identified himself as Mr. Hu, rode a train for 20 hours in a hard berth seat to join protesters outside Evergrande headquarters in Shenzhen. The hardware factory worker from Henan province initially invested 100,000 yuan after being pitched by Evergrande staff. When the 7% fund paid off, he took out a loan to boost his investment to 800,000 yuan. Hu, 31, worried he won’t get his money back, said he was willing to stay in Shenzhen until he does.

“Even if I go home now, I can’t sleep well and eat well,” he said. “I might as well stay here and support other protesters.”

Evergrande Pain Spreads to Wealthy Investors as More Interest Payments Missed

Hui, at one time one of China’s richest people, set up a separate investment unit known as Evergrande Wealth in 2015 to seek new funding sources for his sprawling businesses that range from condominiums to electric vehicles and bottled water. 

Evergrande Wealth is known as an independent wealth manager, which is among the least regulated corners of China’s sprawling shadow banking system. Largely untouched by a government clampdown on most forms of non-bank financing, the industry has grown into a major source of funding for cash-strapped Chinese companies by selling high-yield products to affluent investors.

Evergrande capitalized on the loose regulations, selling the funds to some 70,000 retail investors even though these debt instruments, known as private publication notes, are usually intended for institutional investors or individuals with at least 1 million yuan to invest. 

Evergrande didn’t respond to requests for comment.

Evergrande Pain Spreads to Wealthy Investors as More Interest Payments Missed

Red Flags

The high-yield products have raised red flags from regulators in the past. Banking watchdog Chairman Guo Shuqing has warned that if any product offers a return above 6%, it should raise questions. If it’s higher than 8%, it’s dangerous, and if it tops 10%, investors should prepare to lose every penny.

To be sure, the trust funds are closely regulated and there have been no signs of investor protest yet, unlike with Evergrande’s other wealth products.

Anger about the missed payments on the Evergrande funds bubbled over this month as some investors vented on social media while others trekked to Evergrande’s glass-tower headquarters. There they were greeted by a dozen police officers and security guards in riot gear brandishing plastic shields.

One investor, Mr. Wang, had been in Shenzhen for two days, saying he couldn’t bear to tell his elderly parents what had happened. He didn’t care about the interest payments and was just hoping to get his 100,000 yuan investment back.

When asked about the company’s repayment options, including discounted properties or deferred cash over 30 months, Wang just muttered along with his friend, “It’s a fraud.”

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With assistance from Bloomberg