China Vanke puts Shenzhen land up for auction as developer trims noncore assets to ease US$147 billion liabilities

Cash-strapped developer China Vanke is putting more of its fringe assets up for sale to stave off a liquidity crisis and pare US$147 billion of liabilities, after a multi-year slump in home sales weakened its finances and creditworthiness.

The home builder will auction a plot of land in its home base in Shenzhen in southern Guangdong province at a starting price of 2.2 billion yuan (US$304.5 million), according to a Wednesday listing on Shenzhen Public Resources Trading Centre. The bidding process will start on May 18, it added.

Vanke bought the 19,227-square metre site in Nanshan district in December 2017 for about 3.1 billion yuan, according to past land auction information. The plot is located within a commercial zone where the Shenzhen government has planned to build a skyscraper with offices, hotels and shopping malls.

“The listing of this land plot is part of the company’s move in a basket scheme [to dispose of its noncore assets],” Vanke said in a written response to the Post. “Given that the industry has undergone a significant change, the company no longer plans to construct this project and will focus its resources on its main businesses.”

Residential buildings under construction at China Vanke’s Elegant Lifestyle project in Shenzhen in April 2024. Photo: Bloomberg

Vanke and many of its peers have struggled to appease lenders and creditors as home sales slumped since China imposed its “three red lines” policy, pushing the nation’s weakest builders into a financial crisis. China Evergrande Group fell into bankruptcy, while others like Fantasia, R&F Properties and Shimao have been forced to reorganise their debts.

Moody’s cut Vanke’s credit rating to junk in early March, citing debt repayment pressure.

Vanke had 1.1 trillion yuan in total liabilities on March 31, according to its latest financial report. They included 248 billion yuan of bank loans and borrowings, and 74.2 billion yuan of outstanding bonds. Its earnings tumbled 46 per cent to 12.2 billion yuan in 2023.
Chairman Yu Liang (right) attends the company’s media briefing in Admiralty, Hong Kong in March 2019. Photo: Xiaomei Chen

The state-backed developer has said the rating downgrade was manageable and that the firm remained financially sound. At a meeting with shareholders a week ago, Chairman Yu Liang is leading the group’s three-pronged strategy to trim debt, exit noncore business and reassess its funding strategies.

That entails cutting its debt by more than 100 billion yuan in the next two years, reducing its leverage to less than 50 per cent in five years, and tweaking its fundraising model to “project-led” from “company-led” basis. It will put resources into residential projects, property management services and property rental, Yu said.

The impending land auction comes amid increased efforts to convert its noncore assets into cash, ncluding the sale of its 50 per cent share in Qibao Vanke Plaza in Shanghai to Hong Kong-listed Link Reit for US$331 million in February, and its stake in Banyan Tree hotel chain in mainland China for US$67 million in December.

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