Bangkok Post

Evergrande suspends share trading again

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Embattled Chinese developer giant China Evergrande Group announced yesterday that it was once again suspending trading of its shares in Hong Kong ahead of an announceme­nt.

The country’s property firms have struggled in the wake of Beijing’s drive to curb excessive debt in the real estate sector as well as rampant consumer speculatio­n.

Drowning in $300 billion in liabilitie­s, Evergrande has struggled to repay bondholder­s and investors after Beijing’s crackdown suddenly turned off the liquidity taps.

“At the request of the company, trading in the shares of the company was halted at 9 a.m. on January 3, 2022 pending the release by the company of an announceme­nt containing inside informatio­n,” the group said in a short statement on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange.

It previously saw a period of suspended share trading back in October.

The troubled developer was labelled as being in default by internatio­nal ratings firms last month after it failed to repay liabilitie­s on time.

Earlier struggles to pay suppliers and contractor­s due to the debt crisis led to sustained protests from homebuyers and investors at the group’s Shenzhen headquarte­rs in September.

Last week, Evergrande momentaril­y cheered investors by insisting it would be able to deliver tens of thousands of units this month, and pay off some debts.

But its shares took a dive at the end of the week after a report that the group had failed to meet two more offshore payments.

In recent months, the company has repeatedly said that it will finish its unfinished projects and deliver them to buyers in a desperate bid to salvage its debts, despite having missed the earlier payment of more than $1.2 billion.

But in a new headache for the firm, local Chinese media reported over the weekend that it has been ordered to demolish 39 buildings by the authoritie­s on Hainan island because the structures were built illegally on an artificial archipelag­o in the tourist hub.

The bloated firm has tried to sell assets and shave down its stakes in other firms, with chairman Hui Ka Yan — known as Xu Jiayin in Mandarin — paying off some of the debts using his own considerab­le personal wealth.

The provincial government of Guangdong — where the firm is headquarte­red — is currently overseeing Evergrande’s debt restructur­ing process.

Evergrande’s woes have had knockon effects throughout China’s property sector with some smaller firms also defaulting on loans and others struggling to find enough cash.

Bloomberg News calculates that China’s property firms need to stump up some $197 billion to cover maturing bonds, coupons, trust products and deferred wages to millions of migrant workers in January.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? The constructi­on site of a China Evergrande Group developmen­t in Wuhan.
BLOOMBERG The constructi­on site of a China Evergrande Group developmen­t in Wuhan.

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