For more than two decades, Evergrande’s journey to become one of China’s largest developer has come at a huge cost: ever rising indebtedness. At US$300 billion, the world’s most indebted property developer is now facing judgement day. Already falling behind on payments to banks, suppliers and holders of onshore wealth management products, interest payments on two Evergrande notes due on September 23 will provide a key test if the developer can meet its obligations to bondholders. READ MORE
Similar Posts:
- Evergrande on Brink of Collapse: 4 Things to Know (Nikkei Asia)
- Evergrande Debt Crisis Shines Light on China Real Estate Bubble (Nikkei Asia)
- China beyond Evergrande: Contagion or containment? (PineBridge Investments)
- Evergrande Crisis and Contagion Risks (Franklin Templeton)
- Evergrande and China: A Lehman Moment—or Less “Grande” Than That? (Franklin Templeton)
- Evergrande Explained (KraneShares)
- China’s Deceptive Banking ‘Recovery’ (Nikkei Asian Review)
- Inside the US Campaign to Cut China Out of the Tech Supply Chain (Nikkei Asia)
- China is a Minefield for International Creditors (Washington Examiner)
- Vietnam to make Apple Watch and MacBook for first time ever (Nikkei Asia)
- Platinum Asset Management: Asia ex-Japan Market Update
- Fidelity China Special Sits Trust: Four China Investment Themes (FE Trustnet)
- China’s Economy Is Headed For One Of The Largest Meltdowns Ever (19FortyFive)
- “We Decided To Stop Paying:” China’s Mortgage Payment Boycott Spreads As Property Suppliers Refuse To Pay Their Bills (Zero Hedge)
- China’s Economy Is Headed For One Of The Largest Meltdowns Ever (19FortyFive)