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The European Central Bank will allow Greek banks to make their first shareholder payouts in over a decade as the country emerges from a painful post-crisis restructuring.
China’s protracted property downturn is eroding the balance sheets of the nation’s largest state banks as their bad loans creep up.
Embattled German landlord Adler Group SA has asked its bondholders for permission to sell an unfinished apartment development at a 47% discount to its 2022 valuation, as the company races to repay its vast debt load.
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The Bank of Korea warned Thursday that a further slump in the real estate sector would undermine broader economic activity, as it pointed to worsening delinquencies among developers in the latest signal of continuing woes in the credit market.
Jul 19, 2021
Bloomberg News
,(Bloomberg) -- China Evergrande Group shares continued a downward spiral on Tuesday to a four-year low, after a Chinese city halted sales at two residential projects and alleged the troubled developer didn’t properly use funds.
The developer’s shares declined as much as 16% in Hong Kong following a 16% plunge a day earlier. Shares touched HK$6.91 after market open, the lowest level since March 2017. The stock rout has sent Evergrande shares far below its book value.
Hunan province’s Shaoyang city said it took the action after the firm didn’t properly handle pre-sale funds and intentionally evaded supervision, according to a statement posted on the local housing department’s website.
Evergrande didn’t respond to a written request for comment.
The halt came as the company’s stock and bond prices plunged Monday, with a creditor’s successful demand to freeze some assets underscoring concern Evergrande may struggle to raise funds.
Residential sales are a key source of cash flow for the firm, which has been paring its borrowings and met a key debt metric required by regulators as of June 30. Evergrande collected 321 billion yuan ($49 billion) of cash from sales activities in the first half of this year, it said in a July 1 statement.
Chinese developers sell residential properties before construction is completed, but are required to deposit funds from such sales in supervised bank accounts. That is to prevent cash-strapped builders from abandoning projects.
In one of the Shaoyang projects, Evergrande sold properties equivalent to 290 million yuan this year as of July 13, but only 106 million yuan was deposited in the escrow account, according to the local government statement. It said that for another project, about 17 million yuan was deposited, versus 238 million yuan of sales.
Local authorities repeatedly asked the company to rectify its action, according to the statement, but Evergrande allegedly failed to correct alleged wrongdoings. The sales halt lasts until Oct. 13, the statement said, and Evergrande can’t use funds currently deposited in supervised bank accounts.
(Updates with Evergrande share price in second paragraph)
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