Distressed developers face land seizuresChina's leaders are considering a plan to seize undeveloped land from distressed real estate companies and using it to help finance the completion of stalled housing projects that have sparked mortgage boycotts across the country.
The idea, which is still under discussion and could change, would take advantage of mainland laws allowing local governments to wrest back control of land sold to real estate companies
if it remains undeveloped after two years and without compensation.That would give authorities more leeway to direct funds toward uncompleted homes - but potentially to the detriment of creditors, who would lose claims on some of the developers' most valuable assets.
While authorities would have the bandwidth to adjust the process to suit local conditions, sources said, a typical scenario would involve seizing land from a distressed developer and giving it to a healthier rival. That would, in turn, provide funding to complete the distressed developer's stalled projects.
There is also a suggestion authorities could
rezone seized land in some cases to increase its value.The land seizure proposal is one of several measures under consideration as President Xi Jinping's administration tries to prevent further turmoil in the housing market from fueling social unrest and derailing the broader economy.
Meanwhile, China Evergrande (3333), the world's most indebted developer and at the center of the broader debt crisis in China's property sector, appears to have failed by not delivering a "preliminary restructuring plan" by the end of July.
At the same time, Evergrande's electric vehicle unit reported receiving over 37,000 pre-orders for its Hengchi 5 model, to be delivered as soon as October.
Source: The Standard
https://www.thestandard.com.hk/section- ... d-seizures
It's all about "how much you made when you were right" & "how little you lost when you were wrong"