New Delhi: Will Beijing come to the rescue of Chinas real estate behemoth Evergrande Group? The problem has arisen amidst rising debt levels in the Chinese economy at a time when Beijing has been pushing ahead with its ambitious BRI objects to gain geopolitical clout. While the Chinese government bailed out the state-owned Huarong Asset Management with total liabilities estimated at $238 billion it has not disclosed its cards on the Evergrande Group.
Huarong had announced its annual financial statements after a four-month delay, showing a 90 per cent drop in profits year on year." Effectively, the firm was on the chopping block for default and Beijing had a Lehman-sized issue on its hands," the Diplomat, in an article, said. Beijing after much deliberation, stepped in to save the company with fresh capital of $7.7 billion from Citic Group -- formerly the China International Trust Investment Corporation -- and other state owned enterprises.Forbes noted that for American observers, the Huarong rescue might compare to the March 2008 U.S. government-orchestrated salvage of Bear Stearns (the distressed investment bank).Within a month, Evergrande Group, which owes over $300 billion, hit headlines.
As investors and the global business community keenly watch the developments, Beijing has not indicated whether it would be willing to help the real estate major."By bailing out its most bloated property developer right now, Beijing would shoot itself in one foot to save the other. A $300 billion bailout would just transfer the liability to the government and worsen the government's pre-existing debt hangover," the Diplomat noted.China's overall rising debt problem Rising debt—public as well as private—has become a cause for serious concern for China. Reports have suggested that about $1.3 trillion is the estimated Chinese corporate debt that would be due in 12 months. The Washington-based Institute of International Finance (IIF) in 2019 said that China's debt topped 300 per cent of GDP.