Real estate: Court orders dissolution of China Evergrande

Real estate: Court orders dissolution of China Evergrande

Foreign creditors fought with China Evergrande for their money for around two years. The real estate group’s lawyers were able to narrowly avert disaster on several occasions. But now a judge is making a verdict.

In the real estate crisis in China, a court in Hong Kong has reportedly ordered the dissolution of the heavily indebted China Evergrande company. Judge Linda Chan made a corresponding judgment in the Chinese Special Administrative Region, as several media outlets unanimously reported. Creditors had sued the court because China Evergrande repeatedly missed payments. The company had previously tried to avert liquidation with a restructuring plan.

The hearing lasted a year and a half and the company is still unable to come up with a concrete restructuring proposal, Chan said, the South China Morning Post reported. “I think it’s time for the court to say enough is enough,” she said.

The group, which is listed on the Hong Kong stock exchange, is the world’s most indebted property developer, with the equivalent of more than 300 billion US dollars. The settlement is likely to further reduce confidence in the struggling real estate market of the world’s second-largest economy and cause turbulence on the stock market, which the government recently tried to stabilize again.

Today the securities of subsidiaries of the Evergrande Group were suspended from trading. Other companies in the Chinese real estate industry are also heavily indebted and sometimes fight with creditors in court.

Source: Stern

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