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JPMorgan hikes default forecast for emerging markets amid China contagion fears


Signage at a residential project developed by Country Garden Holdings Co. in Baoding, Hebei province, China, on Tuesday, Aug. 1, 2023.

Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

JPMorgan raised its global emerging markets corporate high-yield default forecast, largely due to rising contagion fears in China’s property sector from a possible Country Garden default.

The U.S.-based investment bank raised its 2023 global forecast to 9.7% from 6% in a note dated Aug. 15. It also raised its Asia high-yield default rate forecast to 10% from 4.1% — that figure drops to just 1%, if China property is excluded.

JPMorgan expects China property to account for nearly 40% of all default volumes in 2023, followed by 35% from Russian corporates and 12% from Brazilian issuers.

The magnitude of the increase in JPMorgan’s default risk assessment underscores fears that a Country Garden debt default will have a far broader ripple effect on the Chinese property sector and the broader economy.

Country Garden has a far bigger and broader portfolio of developments than China Evergrande Group, which fell into default in 2021 and announced an offshore debt restructuring program in March.

China property debt crackdown

The Chinese property sector has been reeling since 2020, when Beijing cracked down on the debt levels of mainland property developers. Years of exuberant growth led to the construction of ghost towns where supply outstripped demand as developers looked to capitalize on the desire for home ownership and property investment.

These measures, known as China’s “three red lines” policy, point to three specific balance sheet conditions developers must meet if they want to take on more debt. The rules require developers to limit their debt in relation to the company’s cash flow, assets and capital levels.

China: Analyst discusses Country Garden's exposure to upper and lower tier cities

JPMorgan estimates a Country Garden default could also lead to $8 billion worth of defaults among remaining smaller Chinese property developers, and another $2 billion for “some liability management exercise” from a spillover to other Chinese high-yield sectors.

Over $100 billion of China property bonded debt has defaulted over the past two and a half years, according to JPMorgan. Prior to Country Garden, China’s property sector already chalked up $109 billion in defaults since the beginning of 2021, which is 94% of total defaults in Asia during that period.

JPMorgan also raised its default rate forecast for Latin America to 7.1% from 6.6% after Brazil’s Odebrecht Engenharia e Construcao appears to be embarking another round of debt restructuring that could affect $1.9 billion in dollar-denominated bonds.

The bank raised its default forecast for emerging Europe to 23.4% from 15.7%, to reflect the inclusion of Russian corporate bond defaults, which were mostly “technical” since sanctions from Russia’s war in Ukraine prevented firms getting bond payments to international investors.

— CNBC’s Ganesh Rao contributed to this report.

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This story originally appeared on CNBC

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