Finance & economics | Waiting for ever

As China fixes its property mess, can foreign capitalists benefit?

Needless to say, they are not top of the state’s priority list

Mandatory Credit: Photo by ALEX PLAVEVSKI/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock (12684590c)Construction workers demolish buildings downtown Shanghai, China, 03 January 2022. China's Evergrande Group, the world's most indebted property developer, suspended its Hong Kong Stock Exchange shares on 03 January 2022. Authorities in southern Hainan province ordered  Evergrande to demolish 39 buildings in 10 days because of illegal building permits, Chinese media reported. Evergrande business center in Shanghai does not carry its logo on top of the building, and surrounding Evergrande signs have been gone indicating a deserted office building.China's Evergrande Group suspended its Stock Exchange shares, Shanghai - 03 Jan 2022
Image: Rex Shutterstock
|Shanghai

Overseas investors have been pecking at the Evergrande empire for well over a year. They have so far come away with very little. The Chinese company, which is the world’s most indebted property developer, with some $300bn in liabilities, defaulted in late 2021 and has been fending off creditors ever since. When the firm delayed a restructuring plan last year, a group of bondholders demanded that Hui Ka Yan, Evergrande’s chairman, put up $2bn of his own cash—a demand which went precisely nowhere. The billionaire, Evergrande and many other failing property companies have so far done well to continue to keep their assets out of foreign clutches.

This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “Waiting for ever”

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