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China’s Evergrande defends itself against alleged bribery, fraudHONG KONG: Evergrande Real Estate, China’s No 2 property developer by sales, said today it may take legal action against a short seller that accused it of fraud, bribery and financial irregularity, and may buy back some of its shares.
Evergrande, which has
China’s largest landbank at 137 million square metres, said allegations by Citron Research that it bribed government officials to buy land were “malicious slander”. In a statement, it said it “has never been and will not be engaging in any bribery act in order to obtain benefits”.
Around US$1 billion was wiped off Evergrande’s market value yesterday on news of the Citron Research accusations – which Evergrande dismissed as “totally untrue”. After falling 11.4% yesterday, Evergrande shares slid as much as 5.5% early today. By mid-afternoon, the stock was down 1%, slightly outperforming the Hang Seng Index.
Analysts have said the bribery allegations may be hard to shake off as Evergrande
purchases much of its land through private deals rather than at auction.
The company faces an overhang on its shares caused by doubts over its
high levels of debt. It may buy back shares, CEO Xia Haijun told investors today on a conference call
organised by Credit Suisse, according to a participant on the call.
Xia did not give details of when the company might buy shares, or how much, the source added.
Evergrande’s debt is 1.5 times its equity, according to Thomson Reuters Starmine data – double the industry average – and
three times that of China Overseas Land, the biggest mainland developer by market value.
In its statement, Evergrande said it had
28.2 billion yuan (US$4.43 billion) in cash and cash equivalents at the end of last year. It has denied using accounting trickery to cover up its alleged insolvency, and noted auditor
PricewaterhouseCoopers signed off on its accounts. It has also said it doesn’t plan to revise its forecast for annual sales of 80 billion yuan.
Personal attack
Evergrande also defended its high-profile chairman Hui Ka Yan (photo above), who owns 63% of the company.
Citron said Hui had an honorary degree from a “diploma mill” –
the University of West Alabama – and, contrary to his claims to be a professor, had
never taught at Wuhan University of Science and Technology.
Evergrande responded by saying Hui’s credentials were true. “Mr Hui has never exaggerated his academic qualifications and titles, and has never reaped any benefits from any relevant title,” its statement said.
Citron claimed Hui,
who owns a private jet, had poured at least 16.2 billion yuan (US$2.6 billion) into pet projects that are “comically off-strategy and frighteningly expensive for Evergrande’s shareholders”.
Hui sponsors Guangzhou Evergrande, a high-spending Chinese Super League soccer team, which last month hired former Italy national coach Marcello Lippi as its manager. He also sponsors a volleyball team.
Evergrande said the claims were “without basis”, noting the firm’s net investment in soccer was 80 million yuan, with less than 70 million yuan spent on volleyball and “cultural industries”.
In defence Evergrande said it was putting together a defence team that may take legal action against Citron Research, which is run by Andrew Left from his Beverley Hills, California home.
In January, private equity firm
Blackstone exited a joint venture in Guangzhou, with Evergrande buying back a 40% stake in the Royal Scenic Peninsula development for US$162 million.
Credit Suisse analyst Jinsong Du told Reuters he sees short-term buying opportunities in Chinese property stocks after strong sales in May, though he is bearish on the sector beyond that.
“Housing prices are on the way up so there are policy concerns in the medium term,” he said. “The share price of the sector has already run up.”
Source: Reuters
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