China Evergrande Group last traded on the Hong Kong exchange on March 18, 2022 at 1.65 Hong Kong dollars ($0.13) per share, before being suspended on March 21.

The company also posted a loss of 39.25 billion yuan ($5.38 billion) for the six months ended June, with total liabilities of 2.39 trillion yuan.

  • zepheriths@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    If it was any other place it could be a good idea to look into exactly what it’s assets are. However land development companies in China don’t own the land, so in a debt to asset comparison they are horrible. That’s every land development company in china

  • JokeDeity@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    It’s all a huge scam. They’ve been held together by the CCP for years only it’s now on public display just how much of a joke this is.

    • AlteredStateBlob@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      You joke, but when this all started to unravel two years ago, it actually did bounce. Not much, but it did. Was clear as day it’s going bankrupt, but then CCP stepped in and it all simply stopped.

        • huginn@feddit.it
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          1 year ago

          Evergrande represents most of the working class savings for China as well, as if you ever have money to invest you buy real estate in China.

          • InverseParallax@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            I’m sorry, but you’re not buying real estate.

            The government owns it, you’re buying a 99 year lease (at best) that the government might revoke at any time for any reason (such as they feel like it).

            There is nowhere in china to safely invest money, that’s the point of china.

            • huginn@feddit.it
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              1 year ago

              The quibbling detail does not change the larger macroeconomic picture.

              If you’re in China the stock market is incredibly volatile. Buying property is the “safe bet” so everyone does it, often saving aggressively to buy.

              80% of urban households own, 20% own a second home as well.

              It doesn’t matter what the legal details are, in a broad sense the multi trillion dollar real estate industry going broke in a country that only invests in real estate is everyone’s problem.

  • theodewere@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    China is a funny place… they tend to just copy what they see on Western media… in this case they all watched Too Big To Fail, and decided it looked like a lot of fun… so they did that on a China sized scale, and they’re going to make 2008 look like an oyster fart…

    • ElegantBiscuit@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      The difference between this and 08 though is that in 08, way too many people were allowed to buy houses that were already built, taking on debt they could not handle, and speculating to an insane degree on the health of those mortgages. A structural issue with no structural cure except to bail out individual homeowners who took on way too much debt which was never gonna happen. For evergrande (as I understand it) it’s just the property developer running out of cash to pay for the construction. The homes were already paid for, so at most the house buyers will just be either SOL or directly bailed out by the government for which there is a strong case to do so, and evergrande shareholders losing their investment is not really a big deal since they’ll probably be paid out in the bankruptcy. I feel like this whole thing is a really big parallel to Silicon Valley bank, for which all the doomers were out there peddling the impending collapse of the financial system which never happened.

      If anything is gonna bring down China it will be their demographic collapse, and that is impossible to fix and already manifesting. There is of course the usual argument of a huge tax base suddenly becoming a budget liability with a significantly smaller population of people to financially support them. But the big thing that will hit the private sector is the lower population causing rising labor costs which is driving away manufacturing, and the bulk of their entire industrial infrastructure is now set up for something they will no longer be very competitive in, and for a sector which young educated urban people don’t really want to work in.