stock markets

Evergrande backer Chinese Estates’ stock soars on take-private offer

Reuters

This is AI generated summarization, which may have errors. For context, always refer to the full article.

Evergrande backer Chinese Estates’ stock soars on take-private offer

EMBATTLED DEVELOPER. A man walks past a construction site near the headquarters of China Evergrande Group in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, China, September 26, 2021.

Aly Song/Reuters

The offer represents the latest move by Chinese Estates Holdings to emerge from the shadow of China Evergrande Group, which is floundering due to a huge debt load

Shares of Chinese Estates Holdings, a former major shareholder of embattled developer China Evergrande, jumped as much as 32% on Thursday, October 7, after it announced an offer to be taken private for HK$1.91 billion ($245 million).

The Hong Kong developer said on Wednesday, October 6, the family of Chinese Estates’ biggest shareholder, Joseph Lau, had proposed to take it private by offering minority shareholders a 38% premium to its last traded price.

The offer represents the latest move by Lau and Chinese Estates to emerge from the shadow of Evergrande, which is floundering due to a huge debt load and threatening the Hong Kong company’s future.

Formerly Evergrande’s second biggest shareholder, Chinese Estates has already slashed its holding over the past few months to 4.39% from 6.48%. It has flagged a goal to exit the holding completely and estimates a loss of HK$10.41 billion for the current year from the stake disposal.

Eugene Law, business development director of China Galaxy International Financial, said as a listed company Chinese Estates would need to keep updating on its position in Evergrande and “it does not want that trouble.”

Once China’s top-selling property group, Evergrande is facing one of the country’s largest-ever defaults as it struggles with more than $300 billion of debt. Its fate is also unsettling global markets wary about the fallout of one of China’s biggest borrowers toppling.

Must Read

Asian high-yield bond issuers feel Evergrande pain as investors eye better protection

Asian high-yield bond issuers feel Evergrande pain as investors eye better protection

Chinese Estates’ shares rose to HK$3.81 by noon. They resumed trading on Thursday after being suspended on September 29.

Shares of the Hong Kong developer were down 42% this year before the trading suspension, dragged down by unrealized losses in its investment in Evergrande whose stock took a hit due to liquidity crisis and default risks.

In a statement late on Wednesday, Chinese Estates said its stock price may be further affected by Evergrande, as it is “cautious and concerned” about recent developments at the Chinese developer.

A delisting would reduce the costs and management resources to maintain the listing status, Chinese Estates added, and it could provide more flexibility to implement long-term business strategies.

Other than Evergrande, Chinese Estates said it also has significant investments in another Chinese developer, Kaisa Group, whose shares have also suffered falls over the past few months on wider liquidity concerns about China’s real estate sector.

Chinese Estates’ former chairman Lau has been a major backer of Evergrande chairman Hui Ka Yan and is a member of the so-called “poker club” of Hong Kong tycoons that includes Hui.

Lau, whose family owns about 75% of Chinese Estates’ equity capital, resigned as its chairman and chief executive in 2014 after he was found guilty of bribery and money laundering charges in the gambling hub of Macau. – Rappler.com

$1 = 7.7857 Hong Kong dollars

Add a comment

Sort by

There are no comments yet. Add your comment to start the conversation.

Summarize this article with AI

How does this make you feel?

Loading
Download the Rappler App!