Evergrande officially defaulted
China Evergrande Group today again defaulted on interest
payments to international investors. DMSA itself is invested in these bonds and
has not received any interest payments until today's end of the grace period.
Now DMSA is preparing bankruptcy proceedings against Evergrande and calls on
all bond investors to join it.
China Evergrande Group, the second largest real estate
developer in China, defaulted on interest payments on two bonds back in
September, with the 30-day grace period still ending in October. However,
shortly before the end of the grace period, the public was misled by rumors
about alleged interest payments.
The international media also took the rumors for granted.
Only the DMSA - Deutsche Marktscreening Agentur (German Market Screening
Agency) already recognized the default at that time and proved in a study that
the bankruptcy of Evergrande, the world's most indebted corporation, could
ultimately lead to a "Great Reset", i.e. the final meltdown of the
global financial system.
"But while the international financial market has so
far met the financial turmoil surrounding the teetering giant Evergrande with a
remarkable basic confidence - one can also say: with remarkable naivety - the
U.S. central bank Fed confirmed our view yesterday," says DMSA senior
analyst Dr. Marco Metzler. "In its latest stability report, it explicitly
pointed out the dangers that a collapse of Evergrande could have for the global
financial system."
In order to be able to file for bankruptcy against the company
as a creditor, DMSA itself invested in Evergrande bonds, whose grace period
expired today (Nov. 10, 2021). In total, Evergrande would have had to pay
$148.13 million in interest on three bonds no later than today. "But so
far we have not received any interest on our bonds," explains Metzler. He
adds, "With banks in Hong Kong closing today, it's certain that these
bonds have defaulted."
Particularly problematic for Evergrande: all 23 outstanding
bonds have a cross-default clause. "This means that if a single one of
these bonds defaults, all 23 outstanding bonds automatically have 'default'
status" DMSA senior analyst Metzler knows. However, this does not
automatically result in a bankruptcy for Evergrande Group. To determine
bankruptcy, a insolvency petition must be filed with the court. This can be
done either by the company itself or by one or more of the company's creditors.
And this is precisely what is now planned. Metzler:
"DMSA is preparing bankruptcy proceedings against Evergrande. We are
already holding talks with other investors in this regard. We would be pleased
if other investors were to join our action group."
For the DMSA expert, it is clear: "As soon as a court
opens insolvency proceedings, Evergrande will also be officially bankrupt - and
that is only a matter of days."



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