Lotte E&C Lands AAA Rating on ₩300 Billion ABS in Credit Rehabilitation Step
TL;DR - Lotte E&C raised ₩300 billion ($219 million) through asset-backed securities rated AAA, two notches above the builder's own A0 issuer profile. - Hana Bank's ₩150 billion ($110 million) credit line and sold-out housing receivables anchor the deal; ₩2.6 trillion ($1.9 billion) in inflows are expected from 20 sites completing in 2027. - Watch whether mid-tier peers replicate the structure as Korea's construction sector continues to repair from the post-Taeyoung project-finance crunch.
Lead
Lotte Engineering & Construction (Lotte E&C), the Lotte Group construction affiliate and South Korea's eighth-largest builder by capability evaluation, said Monday it raised ₩300 billion ($219 million) through asset-backed securities (ABS) rated AAA — the highest possible domestic grade and two notches above the company's own A0 issuer rating. The builder structured the program in-house, backing it with construction-payment receivables from near-completion housing sites plus a ₩150 billion ($110 million) credit line from Hana Bank, one of Korea's four major commercial banks.
What Happened
According to Newsis and ChosunBiz reports on May 11, Lotte E&C placed two ABS tranches totalling ₩300 billion: a ₩150 billion tranche maturing in 12 months and a ₩150 billion tranche maturing in 15 months. Hana Securities and Shinyoung Securities, two Korean brokerages, served as joint lead managers, with Samsung Securities and NH Investment & Securities joining the underwriting syndicate, per Newsis.
The collateral consists of construction-payment receivables from projects already fully sold to homebuyers. Hana Bank added the ₩150 billion credit enhancement, and Lotte E&C pledged deposit operations to lift the structure to AAA. Because the bonds price off the AAA wrap rather than Lotte E&C's A0 standalone profile, funding costs come in below the issuer's typical borrowing rate, the company said in its statement carried by both outlets. Lotte E&C said it may issue similarly structured ABS again if needed and is preparing follow-on commercial paper (CP).
Why It Matters
This deal is the first concrete signal that Korean capital markets are willing to reprice Lotte E&C-originated cash flows at top-grade pricing after two years of stress. The builder's earlier unsecured bonds drew thin demand — Bloomberg reported in July 2025 that a Lotte E&C bond had to be retried after a failed first attempt. The AAA wrap does not move the A0 issuer rating, but it shows institutional investors and a major commercial bank now accept the company's project cash flows on the highest terms available.
The timing matters for the wider sector. Korea's project financing (PF) crisis intensified with Taeyoung E&C's debt-workout filing in late December 2023, when the 16th-largest builder buckled under ₩3.7 trillion ($2.7 billion) in PF guarantees — 374% of its equity as of end-September 2023, per the ASEAN+3 Macroeconomic Research Office (AMRO). Since then, regulators have pushed lenders to restructure roughly 30.9% of "attention" or "insolvency risk" PF exposure by December 2024, also per AMRO. A AAA-wrapped issuance from a tier-two builder is the capital-markets reopening signal supervisors have been watching for.
Business Impact
Lotte E&C said it expects roughly ₩2.6 trillion ($1.9 billion) in construction-receivable inflows next year as 20 housing sites currently under construction reach completion, per Newsis. The structural gap the ABS is designed to bridge is the timing mismatch in housing development: costs concentrate in the months before completion, while cash collection follows handover.
Lotte E&C's headline financials are moving in the right direction, the company told Newsis. The debt-to-equity ratio fell from 265% at end-2022 to 187% at end-2025 (en.sedaily.com cites 186.7%), while borrowing dependence dropped from around 40% to the low-20% range. PF contingent liabilities — guarantee-type exposures, not direct debt — shrank from ₩6.8 trillion ($5.0 billion) at end-2022 to ₩3.1 trillion ($2.3 billion) at end-2025, with management targeting the low ₩2 trillion ($1.5 billion) range by end-2026, according to Newsis and Seoul Economic Daily.
Industry & Historical Context
Lotte E&C ranked eighth in the 2025 construction-capability evaluation with ₩7.4 trillion ($5.4 billion) in assessed capacity, behind Samsung C&T, Hyundai E&C and Daewoo E&C, per Asiae's English coverage of the ranking. Korea Ratings has previously flagged Lotte E&C's heavy PF contingent-liability load as a key credit concern given its housing-sector concentration — underscoring why each step of balance-sheet repair matters for the sector.
The broader Korean construction industry remains in a prolonged slump, with builders freezing domestic hiring and pivoting to overseas orders, The Economy reported in January. Structured deals like this — sold-out project cash flows wrapped with bank credit enhancement — are emerging as a template for builders rated below AA to keep tapping the won bond market.
What to Watch
Three things to track. First, whether Lotte E&C executes the follow-on CP issuance it flagged, and at what spread. Second, whether other mid-tier Korean builders — POSCO E&C, SK Ecoplant or HDC Hyundai Development Company — attempt similar AAA-wrapped ABS structures. Third, the year-end PF contingent-liability print: hitting the low-₩2-trillion target would mark roughly a 70% reduction from the 2022 peak.
Sources: - ChosunBiz — https://biz.chosun.com/real_estate/real_estate_general/2026/05/11/BZJATG3U4ZBOXHCFA52ITGTJIM/ - Newsis — https://www.newsis.com/view/NISX20260511_0003623866 - Seoul Economic Daily (English) — https://en.sedaily.com/finance/2026/03/31/lotte-engineering-construction-achieves-triple-improvement - Asiae (English) — https://cm.asiae.co.kr/en/article/2025073113210282988 - AMRO ASIA — https://amro-asia.org/tackling-koreas-real-estate-project-finance-challenges - The Economy — https://economy.ac/news/2026/01/202601286511 - Bloomberg — https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-07-04/lotte-e-c-s-bond-gets-limited-buyers-after-failed-first-attempt
By LineVest Markets Desk — May 11, 2026
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.



