Evergrande Ordered to Liquidate Amid $328bn Debt Crisis
The liquidation of the Chinese property giant could spark a multibillion-dollar battle between Western creditors and Chinese authorities.
- Chinese property giant Evergrande has been ordered to liquidate by a Hong Kong court, marking a significant escalation in the company's ongoing debt crisis.
- The liquidation order comes after Evergrande failed to convince the court that it had a viable restructuring plan, three years after it first defaulted on its debt.
- Evergrande, once the world's most indebted property company, has $328bn of debt and its liquidation could spark a multibillion-dollar battle between Western creditors and Chinese authorities.
- Evergrande's assets are primarily held in mainland China, meaning Western investors who lent it billions of dollars must now proceed through the Chinese courts.
- The fate of Evergrande's founder and chairman, Hui Ka Yan, remains uncertain as he has been under investigation for unspecified crimes since September.

















































