Analysis
Evergrande collapse means foreign investors in
China face even greater uncertainty
Amy Hawkins
Thousands of homebuyers who have paid deposits for
homes in China could find their nest eggs at risk after liquidation order
Tue 30 Jan
2024 02.12 GMT
As China’s
most embattled – and indebted – property developer is ordered to liquidate, the
effects that Evergrande’s collapse will have on investors, debt holders and the
hundreds of thousands of homebuyers who have paid deposits for homes remains
uncertain.
Evergrande,
the Chinese property developer, was worth just $275m on Monday, down 99% from
its peak in 2017. It owes more than $300bn to various creditors, according to
its most recent financial report.
In a
scathing judgment delivered in Hong Kong’s high court on Monday, Justice Linda
Chan said “enough is enough”.
“It is
indisputable that the company is grossly insolvent and is unable to pay its
debts,” Chan wrote, as she ordered the company to liquidate its assets.
But
enforcing that order will be the next challenge and the queue of creditors who
are lining up is likely to remain for many months.
Evergrande
can still appeal against Monday’s ruling. More importantly, over 90% of its
assets – which include more than 1,300 housing projects in 280 cities – are in
mainland China, a separate jurisdiction from Hong Kong, where it is far from
clear if Justice Chan’s order will be enforced.
“Good luck
enforcing,” says Anne Stevenson-Yang, founder of J Capital research. She
recalled that when Kaisa, another Chinese property developer, defaulted on its
debts in 2015, local governments in China took control of Kaisa developments
and renamed them, in some cases physically barring Kaisa staff from accessing
the properties.
This means
that foreign bondholders – including Top Shine Global, which brought the
winding-up petition against the Evergrande – will be “hung out to dry”, says
George Magnus, an economist and associate at Soas University of London.
And a
bailout is unlikely. The Chinese government “certainly don’t want to give
priority to making good the losses of foreign creditors over domestic
citizens,” says Magnus. “That just wouldn’t be a good look. So to the extent
that somebody is going to pay a price, it will be the foreign bondholders.”
With
tumbling Hong Kong and Chinese stock markets, a predictable commercial
insolvency process is an important pillar in determining whether or not foreign
companies will want to continue investing in China. It will be the steps taken
by Beijing that will shape the extent to which foreign investors can feel
confident that their investments into Chinese companies will be treated fairly.
But many
analysts believe that the mood music for this has already been set.
“To the
extent that companies have been gradually and gingerly shying away from future
investment decisions in China … [Evergrande’s impact] is pretty neutral,” said
Magnus.
The
question now is whether or not the crisis for the company that was once the
jewel of China’s property sector will have repercussions throughout the wider
financial system.
Analysts
have warned against predictions of China’s “Lehman moment”, when the bankruptcy
of Lehman Brothers bank in 2008 became a crisis for the US economy. Experts at
China Beige Book, a financial research firm, said that “contagion is near
impossible” because Beijing maintains a tight control over the wider financial
system.
On Sunday,
Chinese state media reported that the government plans to merge three of the
country’s biggest debt managers into the sovereign wealth fund, China
Investment Corp, a move that analysts have pointed to as an example of Beijing
taking over the restructuring of financial institutions rather than bailing
them out or paying out to creditors.
Evergrande
can still challenge Justice Chan’s decision. The company’s executive director
called the judgment “regrettable” but said that operations would continue in
mainland China, according to the BBC.
That will
matter to the many homebuyers who have made down payments on properties on
which Evergrande has halted construction. In 2021, when Evergrande’s troubles
first emerged, some 1.6 million homebuyers were in limbo as the company had
taken their deposits without delivering their homes.
In a
country where nearly three-quarters of household wealth is tied to property,
the future of Evergrande’s assets will be a major concern for the hundreds of
thousands of ordinary Chinese whose nest eggs may be about to disappear.
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