China’s Evergrande Shares Halt Trading After News That Chairman Under Police Surveillance
China’s Evergrande Shares Halt Trading After News That Chairman Under Police Surveillance - Evergrande's chairman was reportedly taken away by Chinese police earlier this month and currently lives under surveillance at a secret location.
China’s Evergrande Shares Halt Trading After News That Chairman Under Police Surveillance
Shares of the indebted real estate developer China Evergrande Group plummeted on Wednesday following reports that the company's chairman is being held by the police.
Trading was then halted without explanation on Thursday morning for Evergrande Group and two of its Hong Kong-listed units, according to media reports.
The Epoch Times is unable to independently confirm the reports. Evergrande did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Following the report, Evergrande's shares ended down 19 percent at 0.32 Hong Kong dollars on Wednesday afternoon. Despite the slight rise in the early trading, the company's stock has fallen nearly 42 percent this week.
Hang Seng Mainland Properties Index, an index tracking mainland developers listed in Hong Kong, fell 0.2 percent on Wednesday.
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Evergrande grew rapidly through a land-buying spree backed by loans and by selling apartments quickly at low margins, making Mr. Hui Asia's richest man in 2017, according to Forbes.
Evergrande's financial crisis became public in 2021 and since then, it and a string of its peers have defaulted on their offshore debt obligations.
Adding to its woes, recent reports indicated the company is also dealing with Chinese police. Police said earlier this month that some employees at Evergrande's wealth management division had been detained.
The recent developments have rekindled fears of the firm’s collapse, as well as its spillover effects on the broader economy.
The company is "very likely to fail on debt restructuring, and with negative equity, Evergrande may go into bankruptcy, which includes bankruptcy reorganisation and bankruptcy liquidation," UOB Kay Hian wrote in a note on Wednesday.
As the developer's already sold but unfinished apartments will pose a risk to "social stability," there is a good chance that Evergrande will likely seek bankruptcy reorganisation, the brokerage said.