Yang Huiyan’s fortune has more than halved in just seven months.Credit:AFP
Yet even Country Garden,whose unfinished projects so far haven’t been affected by the 2 trillion yuan ($420 billion) mortgage boycott hitting the industry,is facing a reality check. The company once heralded as China’s “role model” builder showed the extent of its cash crunch on Wednesday,when it said it was looking to raise HK$2.83 billion ($520 million) by selling new shares at a discount.
In just seven months,Yang’s fortune has more than halved to $US11.3 billion,including a drop of almost $US2 billion on Wednesday alone,putting her spot atop the wealth rankings in jeopardy. The swift decline underscores the concerns that China’s mortgage crisis will eventually damage its financial system and funding channels,even for Country Garden,its largest property developer.
“Investors worry that the mortgage boycott will spread to Country Garden as they are seeing the boycott project numbers increasing quickly,” said Kenny Ng,a strategist at Everbright Securities International in Hong Kong. “The company still has significant debts and recorded a slower month-on-month growth in June sales even though China resumed work.”
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China’s effort to rein in property prices and President Xi Jinping’s“common prosperity” campaign have brought an end to years of rapid growth for an industry that represents about 70 per cent of household wealth. The real estate crisis that first ensnared developers has taken another turn lately,with hundreds of thousands of homebuyers stopping mortgage payments on halted projects.
While Country Garden’s securities held up relatively well early in the property crisis,its shares are now heading for their worst month since 2011,and one of its bonds reached a record low last week. On Wednesday,the stock slumped 15 per cent,the most since March,ending a two-day rebound on hopes the government would help developers.
One of Country Garden’s biggest challenges is that most of its newly launched projects are in so-called tier 3 and 4 cities,where homebuyers have lower incomes and are more likely to miss payments when the economy is slow.