Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Livemint
Livemint
Business

Rich friends who helped Evergrande tycoon count their losses

An exterior view of China Evergrande Centre in Hong Kong, China  (REUTERS)

Wealthy investors who supported Chinese billionaire Hui Ka Yan’s empire are now paying a heavy price amid growing concern the group will struggle to repay its debts.

Hui had long been able to count on his poker pals to back China Evergrande Group during times of trouble, whether it was by buying stakes in his company, loading up on its bonds or not calling in debts. He broadened that circle to raise funds for his property services business in December, as well as an electric-vehicle startup in January. 

The sharp reversal in shares of Evergrande and its units means Hui’s friends are now facing potentially punishing losses. The developer’s shares have tumbled about 70% this year, while Evergrande Property Services Group Ltd. is 34% below its initial public offering price.

Strategic investors who spent a combined $3.4 billion buying shares in China Evergrande New Energy Vehicle Group in its January placement have seen the value of their investments plunge more than 70%. They’ve been unable to sell due to a lock-up agreement. Evergrande sold another $1.4 billion of the shares in the open market in May to undisclosed investors.

Concern the company will need to sell assets at a steep discount is fueling declines in its listed subsidiaries. The world’s most indebted developer has total liabilities of $300 billion.

Here’s a look at how some Evergrande investors are doing now:

NEV unit

Back in January, Hui sold HK$26 billion ($3.4 billion) of stock in Evergrande’s green car unit to six investors, subject to a 12-month lock-up period. The placement, which came amid a global craze for electric vehicle makers and surging equity markets, helped trigger a more than 50% rally in the shares the day after the news. The investors bought the shares at HK$27.30 each. They closed at HK$6.50 on Friday.

The six are:

  • Chen Hua, the chairman of Kingkey Group, who personally put HK$5 billion into the EV startup through a unit, according to a filing.
  • Wong Kwong Miu, who controls mainland-listed Shenzhen Centralcon Investment Holding Co., also personally invested HK$5 billion via a unit.
  • Liu Ming Hui, chairman of China Gas Holdings Ltd., invested HK$3 billion.
  • Wang Zhongming’s Shenzhen Greenwoods Investment Group invested $5 billion.
  • Chan Hoi-wan, chief executive officer of Chinese Estates Holdings Ltd. and wife of Hong Kong billionaire Joseph Lau, invested HK$3 billion.
  • Wang Kaiguo invested HK$5 billion via Heyirong International Trade Co.

Property Services IPO

Evergrande’s property management arm raised HK$14.3 billion in its Hong Kong IPO in November, pricing in the lower half of its marketed range. The offering included a staggering 23 cornerstone investors. While these investors were allowed to sell after June 2, other stakeholders will be locked up until Dec. 2.

Three of the strategic investors in the NEV placement were also anchor investors in the property services unit, according to filings and term sheets seen by Bloomberg. Chinese Estates’ Chan was the biggest backer of the pre-listing funding round, subscribing to 5% of the shares, while Kingkey bought HK$236 million. Centralcon Group’s controlling founder made a HK$200 million investment.

Poker Pals

Some of Hui’s closest allies are from a group with whom he shares a fondness for a Chinese poker game. Known as the Big Two Club for the game’s name, the clan includes Chinese Estates’ Lau, New World Development Co.’s Henry Cheng and C C Land’s Cheung Chung Kiu. They have done numerous transactions over the years and are so interconnected that any default by Evergrande would have repercussions for their businesses.

  • Chinese Estates swung to a loss in the first half of the year due to the drop in income from Evergrande, which cut its annual dividend in March and later decided against a special payout. The paper loss of its Evergrande stock holdings amounted to HK$4.11 billion. Chinese Estates shares trade near their lowest level since 2004.
  • China Strategic Holdings Ltd., an investment firm backed by New World’s Cheng, said in a statement Friday it holds 133.6 million China Evergrande NEV shares. Based on the last closing price of the electric vehicle maker, its stake is worth about HK$868 million, compared with its investment value of HK$3.9 billion. China Strategic also sold Evergrande bonds for a loss of $4.7 million, according to an Aug. 24 statement.
  • C C Land said in its interim report that its stake in Evergrande’s electric vehicle unit was worth more than 5% of its total assets, its largest investment by that measure.

Suning Fallout

Billionaire Zhang Jindong lost control of the retail arm of his Suning empire when it received a state-backed bailout in July. Concern over his group’s cash flow flared in September, when Zhang waived his right to a 20 billion yuan payment from Evergrande. The decision helped his friend Hui save his own company but made little financial sense to investors. 

Shenzhen Support

It’s not just wealthy individuals feeling the pain. Shenzhen Investment Ltd., a listed property developer controlled by the Shenzhen government, said the value of its Hengda Real Estate Group Ltd. fell about HK$833 million in the first half. As of June 30, the stake was worth about 4% of its total assets, according to a statement to the Hong Kong stock exchange. 

Bond Buyer

Asia Orient Holdings Ltd., led by secretive tycoon Poon Jing, disclosed in July it amassed Evergrande bonds with a face value of $1 billion, according to an exchange filing, including bonds it bought for $230 million over the past year. At the time of the announcement, Poon’s company and its affiliates were sitting on unrealized losses on disclosed holdings, given Evergrande bonds traded near record lows, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

This story has been published from a wire agency feed without modifications to the text.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.