More than three years into China’s housing crisis, there is still no sign of its ending, the Wall Street Journal reported. Now, as private and locally owned developers keep faltering, the sector is becoming more state-dominated. That marks a stunning reversal for an industry that has been a poster child for China’s economic development. The latest private builder to run into a liquidity crisis is China Vanke, one of the country’s largest remaining developers. But state intervention has pulled it back from the brink of potential default, for now.
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One of China’s biggest property companies warned of a multibillion-dollar loss with its top executives resigning on Monday, raising fears that even developers once regarded as among the country’s most solid are vulnerable to China’s brutal, drawn-out real-estate crisis, the Wall Street Journal reported. China Vanke warned on Monday of a loss of 45 billion yuan, equivalent to around $6.2 billion, for 2024, and said Chairman Yu Liang and Chief Executive Officer Zhu Jiusheng will resign.
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China Vanke, one of China’s largest property developers, said on Monday that its top executives were stepping down and warned of a $6.2 billion loss for 2024, the latest sign that China’s grueling multiyear property downturn has not reached the bottom, the New York Times reported. In a filing in Hong Kong, Vanke said that its chairman, Yu Liang, would leave his post for “work adjustment reasons.” Zhu Jiusheng, the chief executive, would resign “due to health reasons,” the company said.
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China’s official gauge of factory activity tumbled into contractionary territory in January as factories suspended operations days ahead of the Lunar New Year holiday, WSJ Pro Bankruptcy reported. The manufacturing purchasing managers index fell to 49.1 in January from 50.1 in December, according to data released Monday by the National Bureau of Statistics. That ended a three-month streak of the gauge staying above the 50 mark separating expansion from contraction.
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A creditor to an overseas arm of China’s largest construction company is asking a U.S. bankruptcy court to help investigate whether the firm may have committed fraud, Bloomberg News reported. China Construction America Inc. filed for chapter 11 in New Jersey last month. The company is a subsidiary of state-owned China State Construction Engineering Corp. The largest unsecured creditor of the case, BML Properties Ltd., wants the court to appoint an examiner to look for potential fraud and misconduct, according to a motion filed on Thursday.
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Authorities in Beijing are ramping up pressure on neighbors to rein in cyberscams after the high-profile kidnapping of a young Chinese actor who says he was trafficked into a criminal enclave in Myanmar, the Wall Street Journal reported. Parts of war-torn Myanmar and other countries in Southeast Asia have become havens for sprawling scam compounds, where hundreds of thousands of people are forced to swindle billions of dollars out of victims in the U.S., China and elsewhere.
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President Trump said on Tuesday that he intended to impose a 10 percent tariff on Chinese imports into the United States on Feb. 1, the New York Times reported. Speaking at the White House, Mr. Trump said that the tariffs were in response to China’s role in America’s fentanyl crisis. Trump said that China was sending fentanyl to Canada and Mexico, from where it would be transported into the United States. The tariff threat comes after Mr.
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China is set to impose a 1 million yuan ($137,309) cap on the annual income of staff at central government-owned financial institutions, three sources said, expanding a campaign against excess against a backdrop of economic slowdown, Reuters reported. Those whose income already exceeds 1 million yuan will have their payout cut, such as middle and senior managers whose income will as much as halve in an overhaul of the compensation structure at 27 financial giants including the "Big Five" banks, six leading insurers and four major bad debt managers.
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China Vanke Co. (萬科) rebounded from record lows in credit markets, as people familiar with the matter said the distressed developer had previously told some creditors it had enough cash prepared to repay a local note, the Taipei Times reported. The firm told some creditors prior to turbulence in its bonds and shares yesterday that it had prepared enough cash to repay a 3 billion yuan (US$409.3 million) bond due on Jan. 27.
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Longi Green Energy Technology said the Chinese solar panel giant expects to have swung into the red last year with a net loss of as much as CNY8.8 billion (USD1.2 billion) mainly due to intensifying competition, Yicai Global reported. Net loss was likely between CNY8.2 billion and CNY8.8 billion last year, compared with a net profit of CNY10.8 billion (USD1.5 billion) in 2023, the Xi'an-based company said yesterday. Investment losses from a stake in a silicon material producer contributed to the temporary operational loss, it noted.
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