HNA Seeks Investors for Hong Kong Property

By Prudence Ho and Frederik Balfour
/ Bloomberg |
HNA Group Co., one of the world’s most indebted companies, is taking the rare step of inviting outside investors to buy into two Hong Kong plots it purchased for $1.8 billion just over a year ago, as the Chinese conglomerate struggles to secure traditional means of financing.
HNA is seeking minimum commitments of $1 million per investor for a fund whose underlying assets will consist of the plots, according to a marketing document seen by Bloomberg. The fund has two investment classes: the first has a two-year term with annual returns of 9 percent plus 5 percent of any profits from the project in the second year, while the second has a four-year term offering 40 percent of profits to investors in the final year, according to the document dated Tuesday.
The document didn’t say how much HNA is seeking to raise in total but any funds would help ease HNA’s mounting financial pressure after the group spent tens of billions dollars on a debt-fueled acquisition spree that resulted in HNA becoming the largest shareholder in companies such as Deutsche Bank AG and Hilton Worldwide Holdings Inc. In Hong Kong, HNA has been forced to push back payments of loans it took out to finance the project, located in vicinity of the former Kai Tak airport and where residential apartments are scheduled to go on sale in the third quarter of 2019.
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Pedestrians walk by the HNA Group Co. building in Beijing, China.
The HNA Group Co. building in Beijing, China. (Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg)
A representative for HNA didn’t respond to a request for comment.
HNA has bought four plots of land in Kai Tak for a combined $3.5 billion. The two sites it is now seeking investors for were bought in quick succession in the final months of 2016, and were among the most hotly contested that year, with HNA beating some of Hong Kong’s biggest developers to win the bids.
Unusual Move
It’s unusual for developers in Hong Kong to raise funds for projects through outside investors because they can easily borrow money from banks at low rates, according to Patrick Wong, a real estate analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence.
The Chinese conglomerate has two other loans related to Kai Tak coming due in February and June, people familiar with the matter said earlier. Separately, some HNA units missed payments due to several Chinese banks in recent weeks, prompting three lenders to freeze some of the borrowers’ unused credit lines, people with knowledge of the matter have said.
This story, written by Prudence Ho and Frederik Balfour for Bloomberg, first appeared on Jan 24.

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