Economy

Developers turn to Hong Kong as lending curbed

(Agencies)
Updated: 2010-05-06 17:01
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Mainland's biggest developers are borrowing record amounts in Hong Kong, taking advantage of lower interest rates to circumvent a lending crackdown at home.

While banks demand at least 5.2 percent in annual interest for three-to-five year money in the mainland, the cost of credit in Hong Kong dollars has fallen to the least since November 2004, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. China Overseas Land & Investment Ltd agreed to an HK$8 billion ($1.03 billion) loan in February that pays 1.45 percent at current market levels, the data show.

"For property developers to keep growing in what is an extremely fragmented and competitive market they have to go offshore" for funds, said Brayan Lai, a credit analyst at Credit Agricole CIB in Hong Kong. "It's one way to circumvent tight onshore credit."

Syndicated borrowing by mainland developers in Hong Kong dollars jumped to HK$37.3 billion this year, the most since Bloomberg began compiling the data in 1999, from HK$3 billion in the same period of 2009. Total lending in the city rose six-fold to HK$63 billion from HK$8.7 billion as mainland banks' share of the market fell to 21 percent from 29 percent, while yuan- denominated lending to developers dropped by 25 percent.

China Resources Land Ltd said on April 30 that it agreed to four loans with banks totaling HK$6.2 billion. Agile Property Holdings Ltd, a developer with projects in 20 cities and districts, borrowed $125 million in January from a Bank of America Corp unit in Hong Kong, Bloomberg data show.

Shimao Pricing

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Shimao Property Holdings Ltd, the developer controlled by billionaire Xu Rongmao, is seeking a $400 million loan from Hong Kong units of banks including HSBC Holdings Plc and Standard Chartered Plc, Bloomberg data show. The loan may pay 3.1 percentage points more than the London interbank offered rate, according to Annisa Lee, a credit analyst at Nomura Holdings Inc.

"Companies are going to the syndicated loan market in Hong Kong because liquidity is strong and pricing's competitive," Lee said in a phone interview from the city. For loans, "property companies don't have to pledge their projects as security, so there's more flexibility with regards to the use of proceeds," she said.

Shimao's $350 million of 8 percent bonds due 2016 last traded at a yield of 6.58 percentage points more than Treasuries, according to BNP Paribas SA prices. The company, which has projects in 20 cities across China, said on April 13 that 2009 profit more than quadrupled to 3.51 billion yuan ($514 million).

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