Evergrande's liquidation could derail the Chinese economy and have global effects (www.abc.net.au)
from MicroWave@lemmy.world to world@lemmy.world on 29 Jan 2024 14:36
https://lemmy.world/post/11330110

A Hong Kong court has ordered one of China’s biggest property developers, Evergrande Group, to liquidate after it was unable to reach a restructuring deal with creditors over hundreds of billions of dollars it owes.

Key points:

#world

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maynarkh@feddit.nl on 29 Jan 2024 14:38 next collapse

This Evergrande business has been hanging in the air for years now. I wonder what this news means in practice.

kaitco@lemmy.world on 29 Jan 2024 14:47 collapse

Same. I feel like I’ve been waiting for this Sword of Damocles to fall for the last decade. Until they actually break up, however, I’m still curious to see the ramifications.

girlfreddy@lemmy.ca on 29 Jan 2024 14:55 collapse

China should have just ripped the bandaid off years ago.

maynarkh@feddit.nl on 29 Jan 2024 16:02 collapse

I wonder if ripping it off might have caused a big enough economic problem to threaten the stability of the government.

girlfreddy@lemmy.ca on 29 Jan 2024 16:05 collapse

They probably weighed what would happen then vs supporting the business for a while. Problem is no one can tell the future, so they got caught.

maynarkh@feddit.nl on 29 Jan 2024 16:12 collapse

It may be the best case scenario for them still. This could be their “economic soft landing”.

Reverendender@sh.itjust.works on 29 Jan 2024 15:18 next collapse

Not a property developer! Harcourt, fetch me my clutching pearls!

Buelldozer@lemmy.today on 29 Jan 2024 16:06 next collapse

Real Estate represents something like 30% of China’s total GDP and Evergrande was one of the top 3 largest Real Estate developers in China. Country Garden is / was another of the Top 3 and it too is in default with a debt problem almost as bad as Evergrande.

Those two former behemoths aside China has seen literally dozens of smaller Real Estate developers default and go under over the past 36 months and it’s having painful consequences on downstream industries, consumers, and government budgets.

This ain’t “Pearl Clutching”, Evergrande is just the latest visible indicator that there’s a serious problem with the Chinese Economy.

Reverendender@sh.itjust.works on 29 Jan 2024 16:20 next collapse

So, too big to fail, huh? I see where you’re at.

Buelldozer@lemmy.today on 29 Jan 2024 16:34 collapse

So, too big to fail, huh? I see where you’re at.

Oh no, they are failing. Are in fact failed at this point.

CaptainSpaceman@lemmy.world on 29 Jan 2024 16:23 collapse

Evergrande halted trading on Chinas stock exchange for like over a year and a half.

China gave them time and money to not fail, but it was too late. Now the sticthing is coming undone.

Their stock was halted again today:

www.cnbc.com/2024/01/29/asia-markets.html

clayh@lemmy.ml on 29 Jan 2024 16:09 collapse

Yeah I didn’t own a house in 2008 so that whole financial crisis thing had zero impact on me 🤔

Jaysyn@kbin.social on 29 Jan 2024 16:12 next collapse

and have global effects

I'll take "Shit that Doesn't Effect Me at All", for $400 Alex.

FaceDeer@kbin.social on 29 Jan 2024 17:23 next collapse

That category is sparser than you might think. If China's economy collapses you will definitely see an affect on what you pay for stuff. And there'll be other geopolitical impacts too, as the countries around the world readjust priorities to account for this change.

conquer4@lemmy.world on 29 Jan 2024 17:47 collapse

I’m fine with paying more, if it doesn’t come from China.

FaceDeer@kbin.social on 29 Jan 2024 18:26 collapse

Okay, so you're fine with it. Bully for you. There are a lot of people in your society who are living much closer to the edge and will find themselves in a lot of trouble if prices for the stuff they need go up.

The point of why this is a problem is ripple effects. None of us own shares in Evergrande. But Evergrande's collapse could cause such big ripples that it's bound to affect us anyway, even way out at the fringes of seemingly unrelated economies. Your lifestyle may not be impacted directly but you'll find yourself wondering "why are there suddenly a bunch of wars in southeast Asia?" Then "why are gas prices through the roof?" And then "why are all the prices through the roof?" And finally "why are the poors rioting in the streets and burning my house? Don't they know how expensive it is now?"

dragontamer@lemmy.world on 29 Jan 2024 19:40 collapse

Then “why are gas prices through the roof?”

You mean, “Why are gas prices so damn low?”, because a giant economic recession in China will CUT gasoline prices as huge swaths of Chinese citizens run out of money for gasoline cars and switch to busses or other cheaper forms of transit.

Economic calamity causes lower gasoline prices typically.


Its not all bad. The real issue is that bad loans can be transferred to other countries through unknown means. Ex: Apple may have had some Evergrande bonds for some real estate issue in China, and then Apple suddenly loses a lot of money affecting S&P500 funds and then cutting people’s 401k accounts or something.

But economic calamity == less consumption of gasoline (fewer trips, fewer vacations, fewer cruises) == lower gas prices typically. As some people like to point out: all an economic recession is, is when the value of cash grows dramatically (meaning the value of everything else: vacation packages, luxury cars, technology, etc. etc. declines). This “everything else” includes oil, because when no one is going on vacation, oil builds up faster than we can use it.

FaceDeer@kbin.social on 29 Jan 2024 19:48 collapse

It could shoot back up when the Strait of Malacca gets blockaded, or when it turns out that major oil production companies depend on Chinese-made equipment, or when Russia collapses and stops selling oil to India because China dropped its military support for them, or any number of other possible knock-on effects.

The exact details are not the important thing in what I was talking about. The point is that China's economic woes will have an effect on you, not what precisely what those effects will be.

dragontamer@lemmy.world on 29 Jan 2024 19:51 collapse

And my point is that effects are often deflationary. IE: The great depression dropped the price of goods.

That means when one country has an isolated recession or isolated depression, its something the rest of the world could easily benefit from. Its not all bad. The full effects are extremely unpredictable, and assuming worst-case scenario over-and-over is counterproductive.

FaceDeer@kbin.social on 29 Jan 2024 20:32 next collapse

Deflation is bad for people too.

where_am_i@sh.itjust.works on 30 Jan 2024 02:28 collapse

While you’ve argued your way into one partial example of a benefitial effect, you completely lack even remote capacity to properly explain the overall effect of a supposed real estate crisis in China. Spoiler alert: nobody has this capacity. Even the whole Hayward’s econ department with all the computers you could give them.

Yet, there’s an overwhelming historical evidence: big recessions in key world economies lead to recessions in linked countries. So, I’d say, buckle up.

dragontamer@lemmy.world on 30 Jan 2024 12:34 collapse

Yet, there’s an overwhelming historical evidence: big recessions in key world economies lead to recessions in linked countries. So, I’d say, buckle up.

Japan in the 90s as a counterpoint vs US economy.

Zuberi@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 29 Jan 2024 17:50 next collapse

Oh you sweet summer child

where_am_i@sh.itjust.works on 30 Jan 2024 02:21 collapse

How do you think an American real estate scam made on wall street made Greece to almost default? And the effect was instantaneous even.

peterf@lemm.ee on 30 Jan 2024 03:09 collapse

China has a GDP of $12.5 trillion.

Agent641@lemmy.world on 30 Jan 2024 05:22 collapse

If someone deleted 2.5% of your net worth including assets from your bank account you would notice and be annoyed.