China's property sector has over the past two years been thrust into a severe debt crisis with many developers defaulting on payments
The Economic Daily commentary comes with some property investors clamouring for more supportive measures for the sector from Beijing
The reading marked the first contraction in China’s industry since January when an abrupt exit from zero-Covid policies sparked a wave of infections across the country
Major Chinese cities have seen a rebound in home sales over the past month, as pent-up demand was unleashed after the roll back of stringent Covid curbs
The real estate firm was among many Chinese developers that defaulted last year as the sector reeled under a debt crisis
The debt restructuring plan has not proven popular with Evergrande dollar bondholders, with one likening it to lending a bucket of rice and then being repaid back with two grains
The restructuring, worth $22.7 billion, is just part of Evergrande‘s total liabilities that amount to more than $300 billion
Home sales by floor area in January-February dropped 3.6% from a year earlier, compared with a 24% decline for the whole of 2022
Bondholders have also been pushing Evergrande Chairman Hui Ka Yan to put in more of his own money to repay debt
Home prices in the territory dropped in 2022 with December seeing the seventh consecutive monthly decline
Prices in December declined 0.2% month-on-month, the fifth consecutive monthly fall and at the same pace as in November
Increased state support saw the country’s real estate developers raise $19.9bn last month – but fundraising still dropped 38% over the year