Chinese companies are facing mounting pressure to repay their dollar debts, as more than $100 billion in Chinese corporate dollar bonds are due to mature this year—the largest wave of maturities in history.
China’s wave of dollar maturities will reach $118 billion, according to Refinitiv, a global financial market data provider.
Japanese investment bank Nomura Holdings expects $190.4 billion in Chinese corporate dollar debt to mature this year and $217.7 billion next year, while China’s local state-owned enterprises (SOEs) have as much as $25 billion in offshore bonds maturing this year, according to a March report by S&P Global Ratings.
Among the thousands of local SOEs, 231 issued a total of 295 offshore bonds worth $100 billion, the report says. The average maturity of these bonds is about two years, with a quarter, or $25 billion, due this year.
According to the report, corporate debt risk is regional, with SOE bond prices in Hebei, Henan, Chongqing, Yunnan, and Xinjiang falling the most.
“This worsening market sentiment could spread to other regions where SOEs are under pressure to repay their debts,” the report says.
The concentration of maturities is most pronounced in Beijing and Shandong, followed by Jiangsu and Zhejiang. About 30 percent of SOE dollar bonds in Tianjin mature this year; Chongqing, Gansu, and Shaanxi all have about a third maturing; and SOEs in Hubei have 71 percent of their dollar debt maturing this year.
Real Estate Companies Defaulting
In the first quarter of this year, Chinese companies defaulted on $15.1 billion in domestic and overseas debt, with real estate companies bailing in large numbers, accounting for 27 percent of those defaults.
The default rate among Chinese property developers has risen rapidly in the past few years. The surge in defaults in the first quarter came mainly from two companies: