Country Garden liquidation petition adds to China's property woes

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By Scott Murdoch, Clare Jim and Xie Yu

(Reuters) - Chinese developer Country Garden said on Wednesday a liquidation petition has been filed against it for non-payment of a $205 million loan, clouding its debt revamp prospects and undermining Beijing's effort to restore confidence in the property sector.

Country Garden said in a regulatory filing to the Hong Kong Stock Exchange it would "resolutely" oppose the petition, which was filed by a creditor, Ever Credit Limited, a unit of Hong Kong-listed Kingboard Holdings.

A court hearing had been set for May 17. Kingboard did not immediately respond to Reuters request for comment.

Country Garden's Hong Kong shares were trading down 11% in the afternoon trade on Wednesday, compared with a 1.3% loss for the benchmark Hang Seng Index. The stock has lost over 70% of its value over the past 12 months.

The petition is likely to revive homebuyer and creditor concerns about the Chinese property sector's debt crisis at a time when Beijing is trying to boost confidence in the industry that accounts for a quarter of China's GDP.

A liquidation of Country Garden would exacerbate the real estate crisis, put more strain on its onshore lenders, and could delay the prospect of a recovery of not only the property market but the overall Chinese economy.

The petition comes a month after China Evergrande Group, the world's most indebted property developer with more than $300 billion in liabilities, was ordered to be liquidated by a Hong Kong court.

Evergrande now faces a complicated restructuring process that some investors think could last more than a decade.

China's property sector, a pillar of the world's second-largest economy, has lurched from one crisis to another since 2021 after a regulatory crackdown on debt-fuelled construction triggered a liquidity squeeze.

A string of developers have defaulted on their repayment obligations since then, and many of them have either launched or are in the process of starting debt restructuring processes to avoid facing bankruptcy or liquidation proceedings.

By filing liquidation petitions, creditors are "applying pressure" on the defaulted developers to come up with meaningful restructuring plans or risk being liquidated, said Nicholas Chen, an analyst with CreditSights.

"Having said that, even if (Country Garden) was liquidated, we doubt that offshore creditors would receive much recovery proceeds given the structural subordination of offshore bondholders and that most of the developer's assets are onshore."