China property stocks surge on fundraising support; COVID protests cloud demand
FILE PHOTO: Residential buildings under construction in Shanghai · Reuters

By Xie Yu and Jason Xue

HONG KONG/SHANGHAI (Reuters) -Chinese property developers' shares and bonds soared on Tuesday after regulators lifted a ban on equity refinancing for listed firms, the latest support measure for a cash-squeezed sector that has been a key pillar of the world's No. 2 economy.

The move will make it easier for developers to obtain fresh funding, analysts said, but reviving demand from homebuyers would remain challenging amid persisting COVID-19 curbs that have triggered rare street protests across many Chinese cities.

The shares and bonds surged after China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) said on Monday it would broaden equity financing channels, including private share placements for China and Hong Kong-listed developers, lifting a ban in place for years.

The move is the latest regulatory easing as Beijing steps up support for the property business, a sector that accounts for a quarter of the Chinese economy. Many developers have defaulted on debt obligations and have now halted construction.

Hubei Fuxing Science and Technology Co said late on Tuesday it plans to launch a private placement of shares to fund real estate development, becoming the first China-listed developer to announce such a move after lifting of the ban.

The company will target 35 investors in the share sale, which will not exceed 30% of the current capital base, it said in an exchange filing. That size is worth as much as 1.37 billion yuan ($191 million) as per its current market value.

China's CSI 300 Real Estate Index closed up 9.4%, marking its biggest daily jump ever.

Meanwhile, Hong Kong's Hang Seng Mainland Properties Index closed 8.1% higher. Shares of Longfor, Agile and China Vanke jumped between 8% and 14%, while Country Garden added 4.5%.

Nomura analysts said they believed sentiment towards the property development sector "should see notable lift due to the continued introduction of policy easing by the central government in the past one month."

They added, however, after the latest change, policy easing on the supply side has been "more or less exhausted", and the central government will have to find ways to boost demand for property.

Reviving property demand would be challenging under the "the recent worsening COVID-19 situation and protests in major Chinese cities, as well as the weakening housing price trends", the Nomura analysts wrote.

Street protests erupted in cities across China over the weekend, which analysts described as a vote against President Xi Jinping's zero-COVID policy and the country's strongest show of public defiance during his political career.