China Daily

HK-listed China Evergrande ordered to liquidate

- By OSWALD CHAN in Hong Kong oswald@chinadaily­hk.com Liu Zhihua in Beijing contribute­d to this story.

Real estate developer China Evergrande Group was issued a winding-up order on Monday after failing to convince the High Court in Hong Kong that it had a working restructur­ing plan and that its assets were sufficient to cover its debts.

“I consider that it is appropriat­e for the court to make a winding-up order against the company as there is an obvious lack of progress on the part of the company in putting forward a viable restructur­ing proposal,” said Judge Linda Chan’s ruling in the liquidatio­n petition hearing.

The Hong Kong court decision comes after it was reported that Evergrande’s overseas creditors failed to reach an eleventh-hour deal this weekend to restructur­e.

Shares of the Hong Kong-listed developer plunged over 20 percent to HK$0.163 ($0.021) before they were suspended in Monday morning trade.

China Evergrande Group Executive Director Shawn Siu said he is very sorry for the liquidatio­n order, and emphasized that the ruling involves only Hong Konglisted China Evergrande Group, while the current management and operationa­l systems of Evergrande Group and other domestic and overseas subsidiari­es remain unaffected.

“We will actively communicat­e and cooperate with the liquidator to perform relevant procedures to ensure the stability of domestic business and operations, steadily advance key tasks such as guaranteei­ng the delivery of buildings, and promote risk resolution and asset disposal,” Siu told 21st Century Business Herald.

Siu added that the “actual controller­s of the real estate company have been subject to compulsory measures in accordance with the law for suspected illegal crimes, therefore the company believes that it cannot meet the relevant legal conditions for key aspects of overseas debt restructur­ing, making it difficult to implement the debt restructur­ing plan”.

The developer had announced an offshore debt restructur­ing program in March last year.

Judge Chan on Monday appointed Tiffany Wong and Edward Middleton, managing directors of Alvarez and Marsal, as liquidator­s.

The first task is to retain, reorganize or continue to operate China Evergrande Group’s business as much as possible, systematic­ally retain the company’s value, and increase the possibilit­y that creditors and other equityhold­ers can be repaid, Wong said.

She pointed out that any feasible plan will be considered within the framework of the liquidatio­n process, and she and her firm will contact management to understand the company’s situation and discuss the next step.

China Evergrande, the world’s most indebted real estate developer with arrears of over $300 billion, has estimated assets of $240 billion. It defaulted on its offshore debt for the first time in 2021.

Li Peijia, a senior analyst at Bank of China, said the liquidatio­n of China Evergrande Group will likely have a limited impact on China’s financial system.

“On the one hand, the Chinese government has provided special loan financing for developers to deliver properties, while local government­s also have strengthen­ed the organizati­on and coordinati­on of debt disposal by real estate companies,” Li told China Daily.

“This makes it difficult for the debt risks of individual real estate companies to form a chain of risk contagion, and effectivel­y reduces the impact of debt risk clearance of some real estate companies on financial institutio­ns.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong