China’s real estate sector
will need to return to stability, after muddling through the past two years of its worst debt crisis, before global fund managers can regain their confidence in high-yield bonds in the nation and across Asia, according to Pimco.
Investors are still nursing losses from a crash among Chinese developers, who contributed to the bulk of the US$200 billion bond defaults since Beijing announced its “three red lines” policy in August 2020. The move to shut funding access to weak borrowers coincided with Covid-19 outbreaks, driving the credit market into an unprecedented slump.
China Evergrande’s collapse in 2024, with some US$20 billion of unpaid dollar-denominated bonds, is emblematic of a lot of failures caused by excessive borrowings and building during the boom years. Scores of peers are still struggling to reorganise their debts and are in and out of court to repay creditors.