One-Third Of China’s Real Estate Companies Are Debt Zombies

As China’s economy continues to sputter, many local companies are having difficulty servicing their debts. A look at 3,000 listed Chinese businesses by French investment bank Natixis found that interest costs exceeded cash flow for 18.5% of them last year, compared with 8% in 2010.
Real estate, the most debt-ridden sector, saw its leverage level reach 197% last year, nearly double the figure for 2008, according to Natixis. The investment bank estimates that almost one-third of listed companies in the sector are ‘zombies’ – businesses that are on the brink of default but still taking on more debt.
‘The share of zombies in the real estate sector literally doubles the average in [corporate] China,’ said Iris Pang, senior economist for greater China at Natixis. Evergrande Real Estate, for example, saw its ratio of total liabilities to earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization – or EBITDA – leap to 15.4% at the end of 2015 from 8.5% a year earlier.

This post was published at David Stockmans Contra Corner on May 21, 2016.