I think there is a very high probability of a debt restructuring deal where the offshore senior unsecured bondholders get >66% of face value. Buy them while they're 27%.
This is literally how Fitch got its recovery rating of RR4 (https://www.fitchratings.com/resear...cted-default-after-missing-payment-09-12-2021):
1. start by calculating a pessimistic liquidation scenario
2. even that worst case scenario results in "RR1" (91-100%) for all senior unsecured debt
3. Arbitrarily reduce the offshore portion of the senior unsecured debt to RR4 (31-50%) due to unspecified political risks.
C'mon. China can't so blatantly rob offshore investors without undermining confidence and raising their cost of capital.
Last time Kaisa defaulted in 2015, the bonds dropped to 30 cents on the dollar, but then rallied to 80 cents when the restructuring plan was approved
This time, Kaisa has already been offered $2B of new financing by a coalition of creditors, but they're either holding out for a better deal, or afraid that increasing indebtedness will offend Chinese regulators.
This is literally how Fitch got its recovery rating of RR4 (https://www.fitchratings.com/resear...cted-default-after-missing-payment-09-12-2021):
1. start by calculating a pessimistic liquidation scenario
2. even that worst case scenario results in "RR1" (91-100%) for all senior unsecured debt
3. Arbitrarily reduce the offshore portion of the senior unsecured debt to RR4 (31-50%) due to unspecified political risks.
C'mon. China can't so blatantly rob offshore investors without undermining confidence and raising their cost of capital.
Last time Kaisa defaulted in 2015, the bonds dropped to 30 cents on the dollar, but then rallied to 80 cents when the restructuring plan was approved
This time, Kaisa has already been offered $2B of new financing by a coalition of creditors, but they're either holding out for a better deal, or afraid that increasing indebtedness will offend Chinese regulators.