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China’s property crisis hits new low with Evergrande delisting

The company, once China’s biggest developer by sales, will be removed from the Hong Kong stock exchange on August 25

August 13, 2025 / 08:47 IST
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The delisting comes as liquidators sifting through the books revealed that the developer’s debt load now stands at about HK$350 billion ($45 billion), much bigger than previously disclosed. Bloomberg
The delisting comes as liquidators sifting through the books revealed that the developer’s debt load now stands at about HK$350 billion ($45 billion), much bigger than previously disclosed. Bloomberg

China Evergrande Group’s delisting marks a bleak milestone for the nation’s property sector, now in a fourth year of paralysis that continues to weigh down the world’s second-largest economy.

The company, once China’s biggest developer by sales, will be removed from the Hong Kong stock exchange on Aug. 25, a year and a half after the shares were suspended and almost 16 years after the Guangzhou-based firm was listed.

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The delisting comes as liquidators sifting through the books revealed that the developer’s debt load now stands at about HK$350 billion ($45 billion), much bigger than previously disclosed.

The liquidators provided a stern assessment after more than a year of going through the balance sheet and the firm’s web of entities, deeming its chances of pulling off a holistic restructuring as “out of reach.” Once emblematic of China’s housing boom, Evergrande’s fall underscores the fragility of the market, where declining consumer confidence, oversupply, and mounting debt have stalled real estate recovery efforts.