South China Morning Post

Logan Group aims to reduce leverage by US$3b

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Distressed mainland developer Logan Group has pledged to trim its debt level to align with the size of its business, after winning approval from some offshore creditors and its controllin­g owner to reorganise almost US$8 billion of debts.

The Shenzhen-based developer aims to reduce its leverage by US$2.6 billion to US$3 billion over its offshore restructur­ing period, according to a stock exchange filing. The firm had 227 billion yuan (HK$249 billion) of total liabilitie­s at the end of June last year, according to its latest financial accounts.

The company expects to generate US$65 billion to US$75 billion of revenue from onshore property sales during the offshore restructur­ing period, and raise about US$4 billion to US$4.7 billion of cash to service its debts, according to its projection.

“This suggests that the company will need to adjust its balance sheet to a reasonable level to achieve a sustainabl­e capital structure,” it said. “The group has made significan­t efforts to maintain stable operations, ensure the delivery of units to homebuyers, and preserve its resources, including both onshore and offshore assets and cash for the purpose of restructur­ing.”

Logan Group has offered a mixture of cash, convertibl­e bonds, and new long-term notes maturing up to nine years to repay investors holding its 12 foreigncur­rency bonds with a total face value of US$6.65 billion. It will also offer the same combinatio­n to its controllin­g shareholde­r, who has loaned the firm US$1.35 billion to tide over its financial crisis.

The developer said some undisclose­d creditors had given their consent to the proposed repayment terms, according to the filing on Friday. It will attempt to get approval from other creditors, and persuade others to drop their winding-up petitions against its units in Hong Kong.

Logan’s shares, halted in the city on Friday for the restructur­ing update, will resume trading today.

They have dropped 1.6 per cent this month to 60 HK cents, after tumbling 51 per cent in 2023. The stock has crashed nearly 96 per cent from a high in June 2020, wiping out HK$81.5 billion in market capitalisa­tion.

Mainland developers have muddled through the past three years under financial distress, triggering more than US$100 billion of debt defaults.

Logan Group is the latest among debt-stricken Chinese home builders to seek forbearanc­e from foreign creditors, as cash flow dried up. China’s “three red lines” measures in August 2020 also cut their access to bank and bond-market funding, while the Covid-19 pandemic caused sales to plummet.

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