Chinese developer Sunac misses $29.5m payment as defaults rumble on by AFP Staff Writers Beijing (AFP) May 12, 2022 Chinese property developer Sunac China Holdings on Thursday said it had failed to make a $29.5 million interest payment and warned of more defaults to come, as bad debts drag on the country's real estate sector. Since a government drive to curb excessive debt in the property sector, China's developers have sagged under the weight of massive borrowing which funded their building sprees. The latest property giant with spiralling debt woes is Sunac, one of China's top developers by sales, which missed a deadline to pay the $29.5 million offshore bond coupon on Wednesday. In a filing to the Hong Kong stock exchange on Thursday, the company warned it "does not expect that it will make payments" on an additional $75 million worth of interest payments due in the coming weeks. Sunac blamed its liquidity woes on a slump in sales caused by a recent Covid-19 outbreak as well as difficulties obtaining new financing, pointing to "dramatic changes to the macro environment in the property sector in China." Contracted sales in the country's largest cities fell by 65 percent from a year ago in March and April, due to the coronavirus wave, Sunac said in its statement. So far, one of the most prominent real estate developers embroiled in Beijing's drive to stamp out debt is Evergrande -- arguably the first domino to fall in China's property crisis. Last year it began to buckle, leading to protests from homebuyers and investors as executives struggled to restructure $300 billion in liabilities. The company's travails have reverberated through China's property sector in recent months, with multiple smaller firms also defaulting on loans. China's top leaders in April vowed to "improve real estate policies" and promote "stable and healthy development," in a meeting seen by analysts as a sign that officials were poised to ease their regulatory grip on the sector. The International Monetary Fund warned in late January that the property crisis could have spillover effects on the broader economy and global markets. Sunac's Hong Kong-listed shares were down more than 5 percent as of noon Thursday.
John Lee: the former Hong Kong cop Beijing trusts Hong Kong (AFP) May 7, 2022 As a former beat cop who rose to become Hong Kong's security chief, John Lee is the one person China's leaders trust to run the city as their loyal lieutenant, analysts and insiders say. Lee, 64, is expected to be anointed Hong Kong's next chief executive by a small committee on Sunday, the culmination of a choreographed, Beijing-blessed race with no other candidates. His elevation caps a remarkable rise for a man whose police career lifted him from a working-class family to the upper echelons o ... read more
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