
Evergrande's default is emblematic of the systemic problems Chinese real estate groups are facing. For many years, the real estate boom fueled both the country's credit and construction industries. But now the group's shares are falling to their lowest level in six years. Fears of a domino effect are running high.
By Ning Wang
China's electric market is growing and growing and growing. Nevertheless, not all electric start-ups make the cut. Some are lost on the way. Reasons are too high costs, management problems or excessive ambitions. Only those who get a grip on all these issues have a chance on the merciless predatory market. In the meantime, the stories of the once highly acclaimed bankrupt companies are sounding more and more like soap operas.
By Christiane Kuehl
Just four years ago, Evergrande founder Xu Jiayin was China's richest man for a time. But the real estate conglomerate's mountain of debt keeps growing. Beijing has urged Xu to resolve these problems quickly. But banks and rating agencies are shaking their heads.
By Redaktion Table
The bankruptcy of the Chinese real estate developer Evergrande gripped international stock markets in 2021. Protests by desperate Evergrande investors and rescue attempts through e-mobility investments as well as China’s "three red lines" policy followed suit. Read all the important and latest news on China’s Evergrande from the China.Table editorial team.
Evergrande is one of the largest property developers in China. It is currently also the most indebted real estate group in the world. In the fall of 2021, Evergrande was no longer able to come up for its hundreds of billions of dollars in debt. The crisis posed an immense challenge to the Chinese financial and real estate system.
The real estate sector accounts for more than a quarter of China's economic growth. Seventy percent of the wealth of Chinese households lies in real estate. A collapse of the sector could thus lead to sentiments from the public. To counteract the collapse of the Chinese real estate market and the unrest within the population, the Chinese leadership introduced "three red lines" even before Evergrande’s bankruptcy. In addition, Evergrande also invested in the electric mobility sector with Evergrande's subsidiary Evergrande New Energy Vehicle (NEV).
The Evergrande crisis is far from being solved in 2022. After the insolvency announcement and rescue attempts using the subsidiary Evergrande New Energy Vehicle in the field of electric mobility, domestic investors seem to slowly breathe a sigh of relief. Furthermore, the government tried to ease the worries on the real estate market by lowering interest rates at the end of 2021.