\nThe Group may not be able to meet its financial obligations under these loans, which could result in a default on these loans and a cross default on some other loans<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n
In addition, Moody’s with a downgrade<\/span> from “Caa1” to “Ca”<\/strong> Country Garden’s corporate family rating and its senior unsecured rating were upgraded to “C” from “Caa2,” a rating that puts the company close to default. The outlook remains negative.<\/p>\nHe claims Kaven Tsang<\/strong>Senior Vice President at Moody’s:<\/p>\n\nRating downgrades with a negative outlook reflect this low liquidity<\/strong> of Country Garden and the increased risk of default and the likely weak recovery prospects for the company’s bondholders<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\nMoody’s assumes that the company does not have sufficient internal sources of liquidity You must anticipate the upcoming maturity of the bonds<\/strong> Offshore, given weaker sales and significant debt maturing in the next 12 to 18 months.<\/p>\nThe difficult real estate situation in China<\/h2>\n
This company’s troubles are part of a broader phenomenon: the entire Chinese real estate sector has been in crisis for some time, although it has been driving economic growth and worth for years about a quarter of the country’s GDP<\/strong>. One of the most notable and exemplary phenomena concerned the crisis of Evergrande, a giant Chinese conglomerate that symbolizes the sector’s great growth and went bankrupt in 2021, proving to be the most highly indebted real estate development company in the world. But it was apparently not the only thing: China’s largest real estate companies also showed themselves to be highly indebted. The crisis was caused by a number of factors, including new rules introduced by the Chinese government to control borrowing by large real estate companies.<\/p>\n