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China's property crisis hits new low with Evergrande delisting

China's property crisis hits new low with Evergrande delisting

Straits Times4 days ago
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Evergrande's downfall is by far the biggest in a crisis that dragged down China's economic growth and spurred a record of distressed builders.
HONG KONG – China Evergrande Group's delisting marks a bleak milestone for the nation's property sector, now in a fourth year of paralysis that continues to weigh down the world's second-largest economy.
The company, once China's biggest developer by sales, will be removed from the Hong Kong stock exchange on Aug 25, a year and a half after the shares were suspended and almost 16 years after the Guangzhou-based firm was listed.
The delisting comes as liquidators sifting through the books revealed that the developer's debt load now stands at about HK$350 billion (S$57.7 billion), much bigger than previously disclosed.
The liquidators provided a stern assessment after more than a year of going through the balance sheet and the firm's web of entities, deeming its chances of pulling off a holistic restructuring as 'out of reach.'
Once emblematic of China's housing boom, Evergrande's fall underscores the fragility of the market, where declining consumer confidence, oversupply, and mounting debt have stalled real estate recovery efforts.
'It's a symbolic moment for the mainland property sector,' said Mr Kenny Ng, a strategist at China Everbright Securities International. The drastic collapse 'will definitely leave a deep memory in all investors in the market.'
Evergrande's downfall is by far the biggest in a crisis that dragged down China's economic growth and spurred a record of distressed builders. The company, which first defaulted on a dollar bond in December 2021, was once the country's largest developer by sales, and was worth more than US$50 billion (S$64.2 billion) in 2017 at its peak.
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Despite government stimulus, property sales remain sluggish this year, prompting analysts including UBS Group's to delay expectations of a recovery to mid-to-late 2026. New-home sales by the 100 largest developers have fallen more than 20 per cent for two consecutive months, China Real Estate Information data showed.
Calls for further policy support for the residential market have grown louder as the slump drags on. Still, the Communist Party's decision-making Politburo refrained from adding property stimulus measures at a meeting in July after the Chinese economy held up surprisingly well in the face of US tariffs.
Evergrande has been joined by a raft of firms in unraveling.
On Aug 11, China South City was ordered to liquidate by Hong Kong's High Court after failing to win enough support from creditors for its restructuring proposal.
Hong Kong's courts have issued at least six wind-up orders for Chinese developers since the crisis began in 2021. Evergrande's liquidation continues to remain the most complex and serves as a road map for other developers going through the same process.
About US$150 billion of debt from the country's developers have fallen in distress. Even worse is that a growing number of builders that passed key milestones for restructuring proposals are now heading back to square one. Sunac China became the first major Chinese builder to pursue a second debt overhaul plan.
Liquidators' chase
Evergrande's liquidation has been a monumental task as the firm comprises 3,000 legal entities in multiple jurisdictions, as well as about 1,300 projects under development in more than 280 cities, according to the liquidators. They have assumed control of more than 100 companies related to the firm that collectively hold a value of HK$27 billion.
There were also 3,000 projects under the Hong Kong-listed property management operation Evergrande Property Services Group. Creditors are especially paying close attention to the handling of this arm, since it 'represents a very substantial potential source of value' and are being given 'the highest priority' in terms of attention, the liquidators said.
The liquidators said the realisation of assets has so far been 'modest' at US$255 million. Some US$167 million has been 'upstreamed' and linked to Evergrande, however, stakeholders should not assume that all of the money will be available to the company due to complex ownership structures, they said.
A previous analysis by Deloitte estimated the recovery rate for Evergrande's offshore unsecured creditors stood at just 3.53 per cent.
'The announcement of Evergrande's delisting could add more pressure to mainland builder shares still trading,' said Mr Ng. 'It's a lesson to investors alerting them to spend more time to understand a company's business when earnings are growing too fast and to study policy shifts.' BLOOMBERG
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Air Canada grounds hundreds of flights as cabin crew set up picket lines

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Air Canada flight attendants walk off job, picket lines set up at airports
Air Canada flight attendants walk off job, picket lines set up at airports

Straits Times

time3 hours ago

  • Straits Times

Air Canada flight attendants walk off job, picket lines set up at airports

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