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China’s Property Crash Sends Billionaire Founders Heading to Exits

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China’s Property Crash Sends Billionaire Founders Heading to Exits​


  • Longfor shares and bonds tumble after Wu Yajun quits
  • Once China’s richest woman, Wu has lost two-thirds of wealth
A Chinese flag in front of residential buildings in Shanghai, China. 

A Chinese flag in front of residential buildings in Shanghai, China. Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg
By
Venus Feng
31 October 2022, 13:11 GMT

For two years, bad news has kept piling on for Chinese property developers.
The nation’s worsening credit crisis has led to defaults, failure to deliver homes on time and an unrelenting market selloff. Now a new phenomenon is happening: Builders’ founders are leaving.

Longfor Group Holdings Ltd.’s Wu Yajun resigned on Friday as executive director and chair, shortly after Soho China Ltd.’s Pan Shiyi quit in September. While Wu cited health reasons, the timing has startled analysts.
Also read: Longfor Billionaire Wu Quits as Chair, Shocking Investors
“It’s very likely that we will see more mainland property founders leaving important roles in their firms,” said Kakei Lam, fund investment officer at Metaverse Securities in Hong Kong. “The golden age of Chinese property is gone, and they probably don’t see too much they can do to help.”

The surprise move sent Longfor’s stock and bonds tumbling on Monday, even as Wu’s family spent HK$28.6 million ($3.6 million) snapping up shares to shore up market confidence and the company partially repaid a syndicated loan early. The resignation is only adding to concerns that the developer -- which has the highest credit rating among private peers in China -- won’t be able to rely on its relatively strong position to stave off the ongoing national crisis.
While the trend is only starting in the property sector, China’s tech industry has seen several high-profile founders resign following a crackdown that began with Ant Group Co.’s torpedoed initial public offering, costing the firms billions of dollars in market value. Entrepreneurs are quitting because they’re worried about Xi Jinping’s drive to regulate wealth accumulation, said Alicia Garcia Herrero, chief Asia Pacific economist at Natixis SA.
In the case of Soho China, the stock has tumbled to a record low since Pan left the company to focus on philanthropic pursuits.
Once China’s richest woman, Wu has lost two-thirds of her wealth this year and may soon drop out of the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, which tracks the world’s 500 richest people. As of Monday’s close, she was worth about $4.6 billion.
While Wu’s resignation sent shock waves through the market, the 58-year-old said she’d been preparing her succession for three years, inspired by He Xiangjian, the billionaire founder of appliance maker Midea Group Co. who handed the reins to a group of professional managers a decade ago.
In a call over the weekend, Wu told investors she’s been suffering from diabetes and thyroid disease for years and initially planned to announce her departure after Longfor’s most recent earnings report in August, state media reported. She decided to postpone after the company bought some plots of land in September.

Chen Xuping, Longfor’s chief executive officer since March, succeeded Wu as chair and two other new directors were appointed to the board on Friday. Wu vowed to remain as a strategic development consultant to help with the business model and look for growth opportunities, the state media report said.
“The selloff reflects the market doubts on the ability of the successor and whether the firm can maintain its development plans in the future,” Metaverse Securities’ Lam said.

Known as one of the top self-made female entrepreneurs in China, Wu lost her title as the country’s richest woman after divorcing Cai Kui in 2012 and transferring to him more than one-third of the Longfor shares they held together. The following year, she set up her own family office, Wu Capital, to diversify her investments into private equity and technology.
In 2018, Wu conveyed all her Longfor stake to a discretionary trust established by her daughter, Cai Xinyi, citing “family wealth and succession planning.” She put her in charge of the family office two years later, though Wu still holds the Longfor voting rights from the trust.
Wu’s rise is an example of China’s massive wealth creation over the past decades. Born into a humble family in the southwestern city of Chongqing, she studied thermal power torpedo equipment design at the Northwestern Polytechnical University of Xi’an and was assigned to a state-owned factory after graduating in 1984. Inspired by the economic growth unleashed by the country’s opening up, she quit her stable job to become a real estate reporter.
the_crypto_story
Wu decided to start her own property firm after she bought her first apartment in her hometown, an experience that left her disappointed after its delivery was delayed and she discovered when she moved in that the elevator service was spotty. She founded Longfor’s predecessor in 1993 to cater to demand for new, better quality homes. The firm sold its first residential project four years later, and the business soon expanded to other major Chinese cities.
Longfor started trading publicly in Hong Kong in 2009 and has been considered a healthy developer as it meets the “three red lines” -- the debt restrictions China imposed as part of its crackdown on leverage. The firm remains one of the rare builders in the nation that managed to post net income growth in the first half of this year and hand out cash dividends.
But China’s dimming economic outlook amid its punishing Covid policies and limited financing channels are hampering confidence in Longfor’s growth. And Wu’s stepping down isn’t helping.
“We are concerned the resignation may have an impact on confidence among Longfor’s stakeholders, e.g. suppliers, homebuyers and financial institutions,” UBS Group AG analysts including John Lam wrote in a note Monday. That could bring pressure on the company’s liquidity, they added.
— With assistance by Emma Dong

 

China’s Property Crash Sends Billionaire Founders Heading to Exits​


  • Longfor shares and bonds tumble after Wu Yajun quits
  • Once China’s richest woman, Wu has lost two-thirds of wealth
A Chinese flag in front of residential buildings in Shanghai, China. 

A Chinese flag in front of residential buildings in Shanghai, China. Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg
By
Venus Feng
31 October 2022, 13:11 GMT

For two years, bad news has kept piling on for Chinese property developers.
The nation’s worsening credit crisis has led to defaults, failure to deliver homes on time and an unrelenting market selloff. Now a new phenomenon is happening: Builders’ founders are leaving.

Longfor Group Holdings Ltd.’s Wu Yajun resigned on Friday as executive director and chair, shortly after Soho China Ltd.’s Pan Shiyi quit in September. While Wu cited health reasons, the timing has startled analysts.
Also read: Longfor Billionaire Wu Quits as Chair, Shocking Investors
“It’s very likely that we will see more mainland property founders leaving important roles in their firms,” said Kakei Lam, fund investment officer at Metaverse Securities in Hong Kong. “The golden age of Chinese property is gone, and they probably don’t see too much they can do to help.”

The surprise move sent Longfor’s stock and bonds tumbling on Monday, even as Wu’s family spent HK$28.6 million ($3.6 million) snapping up shares to shore up market confidence and the company partially repaid a syndicated loan early. The resignation is only adding to concerns that the developer -- which has the highest credit rating among private peers in China -- won’t be able to rely on its relatively strong position to stave off the ongoing national crisis.
While the trend is only starting in the property sector, China’s tech industry has seen several high-profile founders resign following a crackdown that began with Ant Group Co.’s torpedoed initial public offering, costing the firms billions of dollars in market value. Entrepreneurs are quitting because they’re worried about Xi Jinping’s drive to regulate wealth accumulation, said Alicia Garcia Herrero, chief Asia Pacific economist at Natixis SA.
In the case of Soho China, the stock has tumbled to a record low since Pan left the company to focus on philanthropic pursuits.
Once China’s richest woman, Wu has lost two-thirds of her wealth this year and may soon drop out of the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, which tracks the world’s 500 richest people. As of Monday’s close, she was worth about $4.6 billion.
While Wu’s resignation sent shock waves through the market, the 58-year-old said she’d been preparing her succession for three years, inspired by He Xiangjian, the billionaire founder of appliance maker Midea Group Co. who handed the reins to a group of professional managers a decade ago.
In a call over the weekend, Wu told investors she’s been suffering from diabetes and thyroid disease for years and initially planned to announce her departure after Longfor’s most recent earnings report in August, state media reported. She decided to postpone after the company bought some plots of land in September.

Chen Xuping, Longfor’s chief executive officer since March, succeeded Wu as chair and two other new directors were appointed to the board on Friday. Wu vowed to remain as a strategic development consultant to help with the business model and look for growth opportunities, the state media report said.
“The selloff reflects the market doubts on the ability of the successor and whether the firm can maintain its development plans in the future,” Metaverse Securities’ Lam said.

Known as one of the top self-made female entrepreneurs in China, Wu lost her title as the country’s richest woman after divorcing Cai Kui in 2012 and transferring to him more than one-third of the Longfor shares they held together. The following year, she set up her own family office, Wu Capital, to diversify her investments into private equity and technology.
In 2018, Wu conveyed all her Longfor stake to a discretionary trust established by her daughter, Cai Xinyi, citing “family wealth and succession planning.” She put her in charge of the family office two years later, though Wu still holds the Longfor voting rights from the trust.
Wu’s rise is an example of China’s massive wealth creation over the past decades. Born into a humble family in the southwestern city of Chongqing, she studied thermal power torpedo equipment design at the Northwestern Polytechnical University of Xi’an and was assigned to a state-owned factory after graduating in 1984. Inspired by the economic growth unleashed by the country’s opening up, she quit her stable job to become a real estate reporter.
the_crypto_story
Wu decided to start her own property firm after she bought her first apartment in her hometown, an experience that left her disappointed after its delivery was delayed and she discovered when she moved in that the elevator service was spotty. She founded Longfor’s predecessor in 1993 to cater to demand for new, better quality homes. The firm sold its first residential project four years later, and the business soon expanded to other major Chinese cities.
Longfor started trading publicly in Hong Kong in 2009 and has been considered a healthy developer as it meets the “three red lines” -- the debt restrictions China imposed as part of its crackdown on leverage. The firm remains one of the rare builders in the nation that managed to post net income growth in the first half of this year and hand out cash dividends.
But China’s dimming economic outlook amid its punishing Covid policies and limited financing channels are hampering confidence in Longfor’s growth. And Wu’s stepping down isn’t helping.
“We are concerned the resignation may have an impact on confidence among Longfor’s stakeholders, e.g. suppliers, homebuyers and financial institutions,” UBS Group AG analysts including John Lam wrote in a note Monday. That could bring pressure on the company’s liquidity, they added.
— With assistance by Emma Dong

Great job from CCP to bring down overpriced houses so more ordinary can afford the houses while forcing rich to distribute some of their wealth.

Something that will never happened in pure evil capitalism western.
 
Great job from CCP to bring down overpriced houses so more ordinary can afford the houses while forcing rich to distribute some of their wealth.

Something that will never happened in pure evil capitalism western.
Has the government sold houses in new cities? A few years back there were many new houses in new cities.

 
Vietnam has already self-triggered property crashing in order to deter these types from entering the market.
 
Has the government sold houses in new cities? A few years back there were many new houses in new cities.


as usual western media generally lies and cherry picks info on china in which ever way that makes it look bad.

for example in your video from 2011, in the description it says " It's after 2pm and in the new city of Dongguan shop owner Tian Yu Gao is yet to serve a single customer."

yet you can google apartment occupancy rates for Dongguan city and see its about 20%, pretty normal in china.

what western news does when they report on chinese "ghost" cities is, pick a city still under construction, then scream at the top of their lungs "looks its a ghost city without residents!!!!! china must be collapsing any minutes now!!!!!! just dont worry about the fact that its new, not finished building yet and people have yet to move in"

oh and find one of a million people who says something matching your forced narrative and report that quote and only that quote. Can't find any? easy, cite a random online post or better yet a "anonymous source" who can't be named because surely they will get jail because china bad!!!

this propaganda isnt even new.
those ring roads in beijing, now extremely busy, were once ridiculed by the west for being white elephants because china has no cars.
shanghai's pudong area, once also called a ghost city is now one of the most crowded(and pricy) places around and it alone contributes some 200 billion+ usd in gdp making it richer than many countries.

theres also this famous subway station entrance:
1667264891017.png

it was ridiculed by cnn for being built in the middle of nowhere.

yet go look closer from another angle, see all those cranes in the background? yea, as expected and usual they picked a newly built piece of infrastructure, not yet fully in used and declares that china has built another white elephant.
1667264751766.png

this is the same station once things are more built
1667264960198.png

1667265009362.png


_____________________

as for the housing down turn. its about time, the housing market is too hot in tier one cities. the government needs to cool it but without throwing it off a cliff, so far despite western hit pieces, its doing okay.
 
Not sure how serious this is. Is this China's 2008?

Asia bond funds dump China in favour of cash after high-yield rout​

 
Not sure how serious this is. Is this China's 2008?

Asia bond funds dump China in favour of cash after high-yield rout​

Over sensation news. China is still the powerhouse of world growing economy. In fact, many fund manager or wealth management firm are scooping low price Chinese stocks.
 
What trouble ? No trouble.
Wuhan virus ? Never happened
Banking crash? Never happened
Disappearances? Never happened
Hu Jintao ? Never happened
Useless vaccines? Never happened
Shut downs? Never happened
Jack Ma abduction ? Never happened
Uighur genocide? Never happened
Debt trap in Srilanka? Never happened
Debt AND contracted guaranteed returns trap in Pakistan? Never happened
Galvan 35? Never happened
Cash and property stashing in CA, NJ and FL? Never happened
Micro-chip debacle? Never happened
 
What trouble ? No trouble.
Wuhan virus ? Never happened
Banking crash? Never happened
Disappearances? Never happened
Hu Jintao ? Never happened
Useless vaccines? Never happened
Shut downs? Never happened
Jack Ma abduction ? Never happened
Uighur genocide? Never happened
Debt trap in Srilanka? Never happened
Debt AND contracted guaranteed returns trap in Pakistan? Never happened
Galvan 35? Never happened
Cash and property stashing in CA, NJ and FL? Never happened
Micro-chip debacle? Never happened
Yes, included coup in China against Xi, I guess that is truth and did happened. :enjoy:
Also no Kashmir Muslim geneocide. No Mosque are ever damaged by Hindu Fantatics. Gujarat riot is also make up. No muslim killed... :lol:
 
Yes, included coup in China against Xi, I guess that is truth and did happened. :enjoy:
Also no Kashmir Muslim geneocide. No Mosque are ever damaged by Hindu Fantatics. Gujarat riot is also make up. No muslim killed... :lol:
Spending too much time in Pakistan Def has you confused. Coups happen in Pak not for CCP. But may be you'll get your wish some day and CCP will be gone.
 
Spending too much time in Pakistan Def has you confused. Coups happen in Pak not for CCP. But may be you'll get your wish some day and CCP will be gone.
The fake news of coup against Xi is spread none other than liar like you. You are making a fool of yourself with such stupid lies.

No one will trust a snake!
 
The fake news of coup against Xi is spread none other than liar like you. You are making a fool of yourself with such stupid lies.

No one will trust a snake!
Huh? You're the one tht keeps asking for coup in China regardless of the thread topic. Just check back.

I thought you're courageous to call for coup to oust CCP but suddenly you deny it. Why ? Did they get to your family? Be careful amigo
 
Huh? You're the one tht keeps asking for coup in China regardless of the thread topic. Just check back.

I thought you're courageous to call for coup to oust CCP but suddenly you deny it. Why ? Did they get to your family? Be careful amigo
Nobody talks about coup in China but you with your cheap lies. If CCP want to hunt somebody down. Its you and not me! :enjoy:
 

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