“Such non-payment may lead to relevant creditors of the Group demanding acceleration of payment of the relevant indebtedness owed to them or pursuing enforcement action,” the company said in a Hong Kong Stock Exchange filing on Tuesday.
The Group is currently facing “significant” uncertainty regarding disposing of its assets and its cash position remains under pressure, Country Garden added.
A growing number of Chinese property developers have defaulted on debt obligations since a liquidity crisis hit the sector in 2021. The crisis has been worsened by demand declining in China’s property market in line with a broader economic slowdown.
Country Garden was due to pay on Monday $66.8 million in coupons on 2024 and 2026 bonds, although the payments have a 30-day grace period.
The developer faces another big test later this month when its entire offshore debt could be deemed in default if it fails to pay a $15 million September coupon by Oct. 17.
Country Garden has $10.96 billion offshore bonds and 42.4 billion yuan ($5.81 billion) worth of loans not denominated in yuan. If it defaults, these debt will need to be restructured, and the company or its assets also risk liquidation by creditors.
The company recorded contracted sales of around 154.98 billion yuan for the nine months till September, a drop of about 43.9% and 65.4%, compared with corresponding periods in 2022 and 2021.
It said it had appointed investment bank Houlihan Lokey (NYSE:HLI), China International Capital Corporation (CICC) and law firm Sidley Austin as advisers to examine its capital structure and liquidity position.
Source: Economy - investing.com