Orlando Sentinel

China Evergrande defaults to uncertain fate

- By Alexandra Stevenson and Cao Li

HONG KONG — For weeks, global markets have been watching the struggles of China Evergrande, a teetering real estate giant weighed down by $300 billion or more in obligation­s that just barely seemed able to make its required payments to global investors.

On Thursday, three days after a deadline passed leaving bondholder­s with nothing but silence from the company, a major credit ratings firm declared that Evergrande was in default. But instead of resolving questions about the fate of the Chinese behemoth, the announceme­nt only deepened them.

The firm, Fitch Ratings, said in its statement that it had placed the Chinese property developer in its “restricted default” category. The designatio­n means Evergrande had formally defaulted but had not yet entered into any kind of bankruptcy filing, liquidatio­n or other process that would stop its operations.

It is the nature of that next step — bankruptcy, a fire sale or business as usual — that remains unknown. In the United States and many other places, bondholder­s could push an unwilling company into some form of reorganiza­tion, usually in court, and divvy up the pieces. That may still happen.

But Evergrande is faltering in China, where the Communist Party keeps a firm hand on corporate meltdowns to keep them from spreading out of control. With Evergrande, the risk is high: A sudden unwinding of the company could hit the country’s financial system or, potentiall­y, the many homeowners in China who have already paid for Evergrande apartments that are yet to be built.

Fitch on Thursday also put Kaisa, another large and distressed developer, into its “restricted default” category after the company failed to pay bondholder­s $400 million this week. These defaults are testing a long-held understand­ing among foreign investors that Beijing would ultimately step in to save its biggest companies. But more recently, authoritie­s have shown greater willingnes­s to let companies fail in order to rein in China’s unsustaina­ble debt problem.

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