Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Businesses

Evergrande Has Defaulted On Its Debt (cnn.com) 154

Evergrande, the embattled Chinese property developer, has defaulted on its debt, according to Fitch Ratings. From a report: The credit ratings agency on Thursday downgraded the company and its subsidiaries to "restricted default," meaning that the firm has failed to meet its financial obligations. Fitch said the downgrade reflects the company's inability to pay interest due earlier this week on two dollar-denominated bonds. The payments were due a month ago, and grace periods lapsed Monday. Fitch noted that Evergrande made no announcement about the payments, nor did it respond to inquiries from the ratings agency. "We are therefore assuming they were not paid," Fitch said. Evergrande has about $300 billion in total liabilities, and analysts have worried for months about whether a default could trigger a wider crisis in China's property market, hurting homeowners and the broader financial system. The US Federal Reserve warned last month that trouble in Chinese real estate could damage the global economy.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Evergrande Has Defaulted On Its Debt

Comments Filter:
  • Lehman Event 2.0 (Score:5, Insightful)

    by b0s0z0ku ( 752509 ) on Thursday December 09, 2021 @11:27AM (#62062855)

    Party like it's Two-thou-sand-and-eight!

    Bum-skella-bum. That's the sound of markets hitting a nadir.

    • A whole new generation is about to learn the meaning of 'credit default swaps'
      • by Yvanhoe ( 564877 )
        There is more than that at stake. People are going to evaluate how good CCP's style of economic management actually is. 2008 handling of the crisis was mediocre in EU and meh in the US. Evergrande's default is not s surprise like Lehman's was. The govt decided to not bail it out and apparently believes it has all the tools to prevent a spiral of defaults. If that spiral happens, that's an indictment to the CCP's management. If Evergrande's fall does not goes any other fall, that's a huge success for CCP.
    • US real estate market was 9% of GDP in 2008. China's real estate market is 30% of its GDP.

    • Why didn't the Dow plummet?
  • by iamnotx0r ( 7683968 ) on Thursday December 09, 2021 @11:53AM (#62062971)
    The Chinese Communist Party runs/rules and allows all the large businesses in China.

    No one can operate in China with zero control; this default has been known to be coming for about 9 months. The CCP has quietly distanced itself from the bank so they do not have to pay off the Western banks.

    In affect the CCP has successfully swindled Billions. They are not stupid. This just keeps up the myth in China, that
    the rest of the humans are not as smart as them.

    As to the posts about a lazy story, there is a reason not many have heard about this, or will. China never talks about what it does wrong.
    It is someone else's fault, nothing bad or sinister happens in China.
    • by Tablizer ( 95088 ) on Thursday December 09, 2021 @12:07PM (#62063023) Journal

      It's suspected part of the reason the gov't allowed this is to send a message to other wealthy corporations that they are expendable. Some Chinese moguls tried to influence the top echelons for change, but Xi punched back.

      • by Darinbob ( 1142669 ) on Thursday December 09, 2021 @01:48PM (#62063321)

        The Chinese government likes to act like it has 100% control, but in practice they do not. Rules and regulations are flaunted all the time The government response tends to be to eventually clamp down and send a signal with a harsh punishment to one entity. For example, shoddy building construction is rampant in China, not because the building regulations are lax but because everyone is cutting corners. If you're a regional party boss you end up thinking that you can get away with it. Eventually a school collapses and a local business or party leader is held responsible and sentenced to death. Then they hope that everyone else gets the message. Like all governments everywhere, there's far too much stuff to keep track off for the resources they have so they hope that the machinery works smoothly most of the time and that only a few nudges here and there are necessary.

        In this case, they may let Evergrande fail as a signal to others. They may even punish some higher ups, stick some political functionary that was in charge over oversight in a reeducation camp, etc.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      That's not really true, for example SCMP regularly covers Evergrande in both English: https://www.scmp.com/topics/ch... [scmp.com]

      State news outlet Xinhua covers it in Chinese: http://www.news.cn/fortune/202... [www.news.cn]

      The real issue is that the government doesn't want to commit to covering all of Evergrande's debt, they want to look at it on a case-by-case basis. Part of the reason is that they don't want any company to be too big to fail, and part of it is they think that it might be better to let stuff that really is unviab

      • As you said, the government may cover debts, case by case.

        What I am hearing is all those local homeowners will be made whole, either by making sure construction for the homes they paid for is complete, or they get a full refund. Same for the local small investors in the wealth management product that was sold. Full refund, etc.

        I think the local banks will be helped out somewhat as well.

        But if you are a foreign bank who is due money or foreign investor, you going to get totally screwed. This way they minimis

    • As I recall the vultures were circling Evergrande some weeks ago, and miraculously they were able to keep up payments or make deals with creditors and the crisis seemed to be averted. Business news outlets moved on to other distractions like Theranos trial, Jack Dorsey's beard, and Omicron.

      Sounds like that earlier situation was just buying time for powerful people/groups to safely exit their investment, and or create a plan for taking over Evergrande on the cheap. Now the wheels are in motion for those w

      • As I recall the vultures were circling Evergrande some weeks ago, and miraculously they were able to keep up payments or make deals with creditors and the crisis seemed to be averted.

        The Chinese government pressured the billionaire owner to put up some of his own money to pay some of the earlier debts.
        The whole time they have been trying to sell off assets to raise money and keep the company afloat.

        But with no takers for the properties. And even bigger debts coming soon. The writing was on the wall.

        Sounds like that earlier situation was just buying time for powerful people/groups to safely exit their investment, and or create a plan for taking over Evergrande on the cheap. Now the wheels are in motion for those without access to power/influence to get screwed over. so yeah, CCP will come out of this ok. Foreign investors will lose big as will the middle class Chinese investors

        That's the conspiracy version.
        China will probably bail out the suppliers who were forced to lend Evergrande money. Bail out the homeowners whose properties haven't been finished yet but we

    • by swm ( 171547 )

      In affect the CCP has successfully swindled Billions. This just keeps up the myth in China, that
      the rest of the humans are not as smart as them.

      That's how Trump made his money: by borrowing it and not paying it back.
      I guess the rest of the humans aren't as smart as Trump, either.

    • by shanen ( 462549 )

      Really? That's supposed to be insightful?

      The most insightful bit was to note the propagation of the vacuous Subject. Rather long discussion and "lazy" is the vacuous keyword about 4/5 of the way through it.

  • The old adage (Score:4, Insightful)

    by hsmith ( 818216 ) on Thursday December 09, 2021 @12:07PM (#62063019)
    "When you owe the bank $100 its your problem. When you owe the bank $1,000,000 its their problem" Except a lot more zeros this go around.
  • This is no news. Its just that they can't ignore it anymore.
  • by memory_register ( 6248354 ) on Thursday December 09, 2021 @12:36PM (#62063117)
    Evergrande was a darling of the community party in China, an example of their 'authoritarian capitalism' model at work.

    Spoiler: Authoritarian capitalism doesn't work long term.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by guruevi ( 827432 )

      Authoritarian capitalism is just communism by another word.

      Basically the government forced the company to go bankrupt, extracting tons of cash from foreign investors they never have to pay back. Soviet Union did the same, eventually investors stopped investing and the country went bankrupt. This is just the first of many more to come, China has greatly over-invested in developing property for its population so they could work on collapsing bridge-to-nowhere projects in the middle of nowhere. They tried to f

      • Re:Why this matters (Score:5, Informative)

        by istartedi ( 132515 ) on Thursday December 09, 2021 @01:32PM (#62063257) Journal

        No. It's fascism. China is fascism using Communism as a brand name. Merger of corporation and state: check. Aggressive military expansion: check. Fascism.

        They didn't bother going through an anarchic capitalistic phase like Russia after the walls fell. They didn't wait for a Putin to make them fascist. The didn't want to lose control, so they jumped straight over to the other side at Tienamen.

        The CCP is fascist. People need to realize it.

        • No. It's fascism. China is fascism using Communism as a brand name. Merger of corporation and state: check. Aggressive military expansion: check. Fascism. They didn't bother going through an anarchic capitalistic phase like Russia after the walls fell. They didn't wait for a Putin to make them fascist. The didn't want to lose control, so they jumped straight over to the other side at Tienamen. The CCP is fascist. People need to realize it.
          Lol, it's one of histories great blunders, every time communism f
          • Really, I believe in the horse-shoe theory no matter how much academics hate it. So yes, China was "fascist" under Mao but it was also "communist" because as you move further out on the extremist end, they both look alike.

          • No one has ever tried communism without being authoritarian.

            • Actually, they have:

              https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

              It just doesn't work out too well. Without the ability to prevent people from leaving, eventually that's just what they do.

              The concept of currency wasn't just invented one time like prevailing Marxist thought suggests, it was actually invented many times. It's actually vitally important for any civilization to scale beyond being just disparate tribes. Without it, that's literally all they end up being. You can observe that in any of these early communism

          • it's not "true" communism

            Well yeah. Just like nothing is ever truly flat, or truly round, or truly black. Communism is a well defined ideal, and any state which aspires to communism can only get so far. So we compare a state against that ideal, and we see.

            So, let's see: The communist ideal is a society which is stateless and classless. Is China stateless and classless? Not even close. Okay, but is China working towards that goal? Not even close. Okay, but has China implemented any of the stipulated communist methods of achieving

        • No, not fascism. All authoritarianisms, dictatorships, despotism, tyranny are not fascism. They are all evil, and they differ in degree, method and philosophy.

          Facism is equating allegiance to an individual leader to allegiance to the nation.

          If someone says, If you are against (Mussolini, Indira Gandhi, Zia-ul-Huq, Narendra Modi, Trump) you are against (Italy, India, Pakistan, India, USA). Note to the mods: I am not saying these leaders are fascists. If some one conflates allegiance to to them with t

          • Well then OK [telegraph.co.uk], unless you're being sarcastic or perhaps pedantic because he may not have made an explicit call for personal allegiance; but it does indeed seem to be a requirement now. As we have recently seen, even calling out one of Xi's *friends* can make you go away under suspicious circumstances.

            • I was not being sarcastic, I was merely ignorant. I did not know Xi is calling for personal oaths of loyalty and allegiance.

              Could his friends be the reason WHO skipped Xi and named the more recent deadly variant Omikron? Was there a Xi variant named at all?

              • I heard they skipped Xi for this very reason, with the justification being that it's a common surname and would thus stigmatize a lot of people not just the famous one. You can take that with various grains of salt. Nu was skipped because it sounds too much like "new" and would be confusing to anybody who speaks English which is a lot of people.

                Also, props for confessing ignorance on the Internet. It's no sin, but a lot of people treat it like one so you're brave to be learning in public which IMHO is wh

    • Spoiler to spoiler: Crony capitalism does not work, either.
  • Partially because the market knew it was coming, but we'll see.

  • Much as been said about the $300 billion debt in just interest alone. But until banks actually get their money, why do they need to pretend to have that money? If you don't pretend to have money you don't have, then you do shit that requires things be paid back with real money when things go to shit in the future.

People will buy anything that's one to a customer.

Working...