South China Morning Post

Creditor seeks winding-up of troubled Evergrande

Unfulfille­d HK$862.5m financial obligation cited in Top Shine Global action

- Pearl Liu pearl.liu@scmp.com

Embattled China Evergrande Group faces possible liquidatio­n after it received a winding-up petition from a creditor reportedly owned by a member of Hong Kong’s leadership election committee for failing to pay HK$862.5 million.

Evergrande, the mainland’s second-largest developer by sales, said in a filing to the Hong Kong stock exchange yesterday that the lawsuit against it was filed by a company called Top Shine Global for not fulfilling a financial obligation of HK$862.5 million.

The petition, representi­ng Lin Ho-man and filed in the High Court of Hong Kong on June 24, is the first officially recorded winding-up petition against the property developer, which is teetering on a US$300 billion mountain of liabilitie­s.

Top Shine Global is an investor in Evergrande’s online property and vehicle marketplac­e unit, Fangchebao, according to a filing by Evergrande in March last year.

The investment firm, owned by Lin, bought 0.46 per cent of Fangchebao for HK$750 million last March.

Lin is also the executive director of Hong Kong-listed fintech company HKE Holdings, founder of local online broker Monmonkey Group Securities and director of the Tung Wah Group of Hospitals, according to news portal HK01.

He served as a member of Hong Kong’s chief executive election committee this year, the local news outlet reported.

Lin could not be reached for comment when contacted via the companies in which he is said to hold positions.

Property tycoon Hui Ka-yan, the founder and chairman of Evergrande Group, said in the filing yesterday that the developer would “oppose the petition vigorously”, and did not expect it “will impact the company’s restructur­ing plan or timetable”.

“[Evergrande] has been actively communicat­ing with creditors to push forward with its offshore debt restructur­ing plan,” Hui added in the filing.

Evergrande failed to pay the interest on US$645 million and

US$590 million of junk bonds in December, even after a grace period, triggering cross-default on its other borrowings. The firm has not published its accounts since a June 2021 report when it disclosed 1.97 trillion yuan (HK$2.31 trillion) of total liabilitie­s.

It said in a filing to the Hong Kong stock exchange on June 20 that the group expected to announce its preliminar­y restructur­ing plan before the end of next month.

But Hui reminded its shareholde­rs that “if the company is wound up as a result of the petition, any dispositio­n of the property directly held by the company and any transfer of the shares … made on or after June 24, will be void unless a validation order is obtained from the High Court”.

However, the developer did not say whether it had applied for a validation order to protect the company and its shareholde­rs’ legal rights yet.

“Similar to the Fantasia case, the petition appears to be a means to apply pressure to the company,” said Leonard Law, a credit analyst at Lucror Analytics. “As Evergrande is due to unveil its debt restructur­ing proposal next month, the petition may be more symbolic than substantiv­e.”

Fantasia Holdings Group, the developer founded by the niece of a former vice-president, received a winding-up petition from creditors for failing to repay an outstandin­g loan of US$149 million on May 26.

 ?? Photo: Reuters ?? The China Evergrande Centre in Hong Kong. The troubled developer is teetering on a US$300 billion mountain of liabilitie­s.
Photo: Reuters The China Evergrande Centre in Hong Kong. The troubled developer is teetering on a US$300 billion mountain of liabilitie­s.

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