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China’s crisis-hit property giant Evergrande ordered to liquidate

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China’s Evergrande Group has received a liquidatio­n order from a Hong Kong court.

The ruling set off what is expected to be a daunting process to carve up one of the biggest victims of a years-long and nationwide property debt crisis.

A wind-up will result in the company being managed by provisiona­l liquidator­s and addressing issues, including control by founder and chairman Hui Ka Yan, Judge Linda Chan said in the city’s High Court yesterday.

Trading in Evergrande shares was suspended after the stock tumbled 21 per cent, giving it a market value of HK$2.15 billion ($275 million).

The court’s decision makes the group, which has 2.39 trillion yuan ($333 billion) in liabilitie­s, as the most prominent symbol of a real estate crisis that led to slower economic growth and a series of defaults.

The liquidatio­n will be a test case of the legal reach of Hong Kong courts in China, where most of Evergrande’s assets reside, with any new management also needing to navigate asset sales in an industry lacking liquidity and confidence.

The developer had failed to reach an agreement with creditors even after years of negotiatio­ns, with Mr Hui placed under police control in September on suspicion of committing crimes.

Lance Jiang, restructur­ing partner at law firm Ashurst, said the market will pay attention to what the liquidator­s can do, “especially whether they can achieve recognitio­n from any of the three designated PRC courts” under a 2021 arrangemen­t between China and Hong Kong.

“The liquidator­s will have very limited powers of enforcemen­t over onshore assets in mainland China if they cannot get such recognitio­n.”

While Hong Kong’s courts have issued at least three windup orders for other Chinese developers since the crisis began in 2021, none comes close to Evergrande in complexity, asset size and the number of stakeholde­rs.

There are also few signs that the liquidatio­n of Jiayuan Internatio­nal Group and Yango Justice Internatio­nal, a unit of Yango Group, are moving forward much.

Hong Kong’s insolvency proceeding­s have limited recognitio­n in China, whose courts may also appoint administra­tors in their own jurisdicti­ons. That leaves open the question of the claims of the $17 billion of Evergrande’s dollar bond holders covered in its proposed restructur­ing plan.

Most of Evergrande’s dollar notes were traded at about 1.5 cents on the dollar as of last Friday, an indication that investors have little expectatio­ns on repayment, according to Bloomberg data.

“The company has made all efforts possible and is sorry about the winding-up order,” Evergrande chief executive Shawn Siu said. “The company will ensure home deliveries and steadily promote normal operation of the group.”

The petition for liquidatio­n was filed in June 2022 by Top Shine Global of Intershore Consult (Samoa), which was a strategic investor in the developer’s online sales platform. Evergrande’s offshore restructur­ing plan also covers $14.7 billion debt claims of other offshore liabilitie­s, according to its restructur­ing document dated March.

While creditors were not seeking a wind-up order, Judge Chan noted the lack of progress.

“The company said it will do one, two, three,” she said. “None of that has been done.”

Still, “even after a wind-up, it’s still possible for the company to put forward a scheme of arrangemen­t”.

Evergrande, which first defaulted on a dollar bond in December 2021, was for a time in the past decade the country’s largest builder by sales.

Evergrande proposed several restructur­ing plans but the process ran into troubles. It scrapped its creditor meetings in September, saying the latest plans required reassessme­nt.

The company proposed its last restructur­ing plan this month and aims to present new term sheets by March, according to participan­ts in the Monday hearing. However, that effort failed to buy Evergrande more breathing room.

Even with the wind-up order, the liquidator is expected to face a tricky process in dealing with Chinese developers.

Most Evergrande projects are operated by local units, which could be hard for the offshore liquidator to seize. And constructi­on work, housing delivery and other activities in mainland China could continue while the process unfolds.

The property market has continued to fall even as China introduced a series of new measures to stem sinking prices and sluggish demand.

“The macroecono­mic impact should be limited as the liquidatio­n itself is unlikely to exert more pressure on the battered property sector,” said Gary Ng, senior economist at Natixis.

“However, it will worsen sentiment as investors will be worried that there is a snowball effect on other pending cases.”

 ?? ?? Hui Ka Yan, the embattled chairman of Evergrande Group
Hui Ka Yan, the embattled chairman of Evergrande Group

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