Business World

China’s billionair­es use their own funds to save property developers

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BILLIONAIR­E owners of Chinese developers have dipped into their own pockets for at least $3.8 billion to save their troubled companies from default, as a cash crunch engulfs the industry.

From sales of luxury assets to stakes in sought-after listed companies, the personal balance sheets of China’s property tycoons have become key for investors to determine whether developers will meet their debt obligation­s. Founding chairmen of at least seven real estate companies have tapped their wealth in recent weeks to support the firms.

The efforts underscore how the liquidity crisis is more desperate than previous squeezes, when real estate firms were able to reap cash from sales blitzes or by offloading trophy assets. Now, with China’s home sales and prices falling, banks growing reluctant to lend, and yields in the offshore bond market soaring, many developers are counting on their founders as a last resort.

The magnates’ moves stand in contrast with counterpar­ts overseas, where the concept of limited liability generally shields owners’ personal wealth from creditors’ claims. The boundary isn’t so clear in China.

“In China, regulators can pressure the large or controllin­g shareholde­rs to mix their personal assets with the company’s and treat the two as inseparabl­e,” said Zhiwu Chen, director of the Asia Global Institute at the University of Hong

Kong. “It’s also partly because the controllin­g shareholde­rs, especially founders, often do treat the company’s assets as if they were their personal property.”

At least for now, such moves have boosted sentiment among bondholder­s.

China Evergrande Group’s 8.25% dollar bond due next year has rebounded to around 30 cents on the dollar from a record low of 22.7 cents a month earlier, after its Chairman Hui Ka Yan raised funds by disposing of personal assets and pledging shares. While it’s unclear how the money was used, the property giant has averted default three times by paying overdue bond interest.

Notes of Sunac China Holdings Ltd., Guangzhou R&F Properties Co., Shimao Group Holdings Ltd. and CIFI Holdings Group Co. all rose after news of their founders’ support, detailed below.

Here’s more on some of the tycoons:

HUI KA YAN, EVERGRANDE

Hui Ka Yan, chairman of China Evergrande Group, pauses during a news conference in Hong Kong, China, on Tuesday, March 26, 2019. Evergrande reported core profit for the full year that beat the highest analyst estimate. —

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