Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Top exec of China Evergrande EV firm detained by authoritie­s

- ELAINE KURTENBACH

BANGKOK — A top executive of China Evergrande’s electric vehicle company has been detained by police in the latest sign of trouble for the world’s most heavily indebted property developer.

China Evergrande New Energy Vehicle announced the detention of Liu Yongzhuo, its vice chairman and an executive director, in a notice Monday to the Hong Kong Stock Exchange. Its shares sank 6% after they resumed trading later in the day.

That followed news over the weekend that Zhongzhi Enterprise Group, a major shadow bank in China that has lent billions of dollars to property developers including Evergrande, filed for bankruptcy liquidatio­n after it was unable to pay its debts.

A crackdown on excessive borrowing that began several years ago has left dozens of Chinese developers out of business or struggling for survival. The industry-wide meltdown has snagged a vital cog in China’s economic engine, reverberat­ing through financial markets.

Share prices sank Monday in Hong Kong and Shanghai, with the benchmark Hang Seng index down 1.9%. Evergrande Group’s shares lost 1.8%.

Evergrande has been in crisis since it defaulted on its debt obligation­s two years ago. It is in the midst of a restructur­ing that includes selling off assets to avoid defaulting on $340 billion in debt, and the company has said its chairman Hui Ka Yan is facing “mandatory measures in accordance with the law.” His status is unclear.

Evergrande New Energy Vehicle saw its shares tumble nearly 20% last week after it said a deal to sell shares to Dubai-based NWTN Motors had lapsed. The brief announceme­nt of Liu’s detention made no mention of that or other details.

The company has delayed its plans for beginning manufactur­ing after running into difficulti­es in attracting enough funding.

Troubles at the electric vehicle unit could complicate Evergrande’s restructur­ing efforts since some plans have involved swapping of assets within the group. A Hong Kong court is scheduled to hold a hearing on its debt restructur­ing plans on Jan. 29. The developer faces possible liquidatio­n if creditors reject its restructur­ing scheme.

The Beijing No. 1 Intermedia­te Court said late Friday that it had approved Zhongzhi Enterprise Group’s applicatio­n for bankruptcy liquidatio­n as the company was facing a “severe shortage of working capital and is unable to recover most of its accounts receivable.”

Zhongzhi, one of China’s largest private asset management companies, said in November that its debts of up to$64 billion were more than twice its assets of $28 billion. Soon afterward, Beijing police said they were investigat­ing suspected crimes of a Chinese wealth company owned by Zhongzhi.

According to the Chinese financial magazine Caixin, it manages nearly $130 billion in assets, but the company’s finances have suffered as the once thriving property market has languished.

Shadow banks play an important role in Chinese finance, operating outside the realm of traditiona­l banking regulation­s. Zhongzhi expanded rapidly after it was founded by the late tycoon Xie Zhikun in 1995, and operates in insurance, leasing, trust, and other financial industries.

 ?? (AP/Andy Wong) ?? A police officer chats with a man near police vehicles parked outside the headquarte­rs of the Zhongzhi Enterprise Group Co. in Beijing, on Monday. A top executive of China Evergrande’s electric vehicle company has been detained by police in the latest sign of trouble for the world’s most heavily indebted property developer.
(AP/Andy Wong) A police officer chats with a man near police vehicles parked outside the headquarte­rs of the Zhongzhi Enterprise Group Co. in Beijing, on Monday. A top executive of China Evergrande’s electric vehicle company has been detained by police in the latest sign of trouble for the world’s most heavily indebted property developer.

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