Evergrande Asset Dump Fails, No Progress on Other Sales Ahead of Saturday Deadline

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The Evergrande Group formally dropped plans to sell a majority stake in its property services arm on Wednesday. This would have netted the company $2.6 billion ahead of a Saturday deadline marking the end of a 30-day grace period on its missed loan payment.

According to Reuters, the deal reportedly fell through because Evergrande felt that the proposed purchaser Hopson Development Holdings had not met the "prerequisite to make a general offer."

Evergrande said in an exchange filing that there had not been "no material progress" on the sale of its other assets, with the exception of its planned sale of a $1.5 billion stake in Shengjing Bank Co., according to Reuters.

Evergrande's struggles come alongside a growing trend of economic instability within China's real estate sector with companies other than Evergrande felling the effects. Sinic Holdings recently declared default, Kaisa Group saw its credit rating downgraded, China Properties Group defaulted on a loan and property developer Fantasia Holdings could not make recent payments.

Chinese officials nonetheless continue to assure the public that the situation remains under their control. Vice Premier Liu He told a Beijing forum on Wednesday that the risks associated with the real estate turmoil were "controllable and that reasonable capital demands from developers would be met," Reuters reported.

CHINA-PROPERTY-ECONOMY-EVERGRANDE
Evergrande's asset sale fell apart because the company said that Hopson Development Holdings did not meet the "prerequisite to make a general offer." Here, a sign of the Evergrande Center is seen at the Evergrande... Photo by HECTOR RETAMAL/AFP via Getty Images

People's Bank of China securities regulator, Yi Huiman echoed these sentiments at the same forum, saying that authorities would also look to curb excessive debt more broadly.

"(We need) to improve the effectiveness of the constraint mechanism on debt financing, to avoid excessive financing through 'high leverage'," Yi said, according to Reuters.

China's property developers bear a total outstanding debt of $5.24 trillion, according to Nomura, a Japanese financial holding company. In an interview earlier this week, Scott Kennedy, trustee chair in Chinese business and economics at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), told Newsweek that China will look to control a potential Evergrande collapse in a manner that limits economic devastation but inserts newfound risk into its financial system.

Moving away from a system that offered general guarantees that large corporations would receive debt bailouts represents a large economic leap, and Kennedy holds reservations as to whether China could execute such a move in a manner that limits larger economic devastation.

Successfully executing such a move, Kenendy said, would likely require Evergrande to sell off its assets in a manner that absorbs the losses of creditors and property developers. Following this recent failed deal, Evergrande's days to move forward with such an effort are limited.

"I don't think that (China's government has) fully convinced everybody that they're ready to successfully leap across this large chasm from one kind of system of reassurance to another," Kennedy said. "I think that is that is a harder sell."

About the writer

Alex J. Rouhandeh serves as a special correspondent for Newsweek and is currently working toward his Master of Arts within the politics concentration at Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism where he serves as the school's student representative in the University Senate and the Student Leadership Advisory Council of the Columbia Alumni Association.

Previously, he served as Newsweek's congressional correspondent, reporting from Capitol Hill and the campaign trail. Over his tenure with Newsweek, Alex has covered the speakership of Mike Johnson, the ouster of former Speaker Kevin McCarthy, the midterm elections of 2022, the Russo-Ukrainian War, and other key congressional stories of the Biden presidency.

Alex additionally provides coverage of Newsweek ownership and has produced investigative reporting on legal troubles facing the Olivet Assembly, a religious entity to which Newsweek's two owners formerly held ties.

Prior to covering Congress, Alex reported on matters of U.S. national security, holding press credentials for both the U.S. Capitol and the Department of Defense. Before joining Newsweek, Alex wrote for The American Prospect, Vice News, WDIV-TV NBC Local 4 News in Detroit, and other regional outlets.

His entry into the media industry began at Syracuse University where he majored in magazine journalism and produced award-winning coverage of the U.S.-Mexico border. At Syracuse, Alex also completed majors in policy studies as well as citizenship & civic engagement and was recognized as a Remembrance Scholar, one of the university's highest honors.

Alex was selected by the National Press Foundation to serve as a Paul Miller Washington Reporting fellow in 2024. He holds memberships with the National Press Club in Washington, D.C., the Society of Professional Journalists (SPJ), and the Investigative Reporters & Editors (IRE) organization.

Contact Alex with tips and feedback at a.rouhandeh@newsweek.com, and stay updated on his reporting by following him on social media at @AlexRouhandeh.


Alex J. Rouhandeh serves as a special correspondent for Newsweek and is currently working toward his Master of Arts within ... Read more