Property developer China Evergrande Group has been ordered to liquidate by a Hong Kong court, bringing an end to the yearslong saga of a company whose default rippled through the world’s second-largest economy, WSJ Pro Bankruptcy reported. The liquidation order came despite an 11th-hour push by the company’s creditors to reach a deal over the weekend, according to people familiar with the matter. It comes more than two years after the company defaulted on its dollar bonds, becoming one of the first dominoes to fall in China’s beleaguered real-estate sector. “The time is for the court to say enough is enough,” said Judge Linda Chan in Hong Kong’s high court. The judge said that Evergrande was given another adjournment in December to come up with a new restructuring deal, seek comments from the creditors, and get a legal opinion on the proposal. “None of that has happened,” Chan said. Evergrande’s lawyer argued for another adjournment, saying that an immediate liquidation order would affect the value of the company’s offshore assets and subsidiaries, thereby damaging the potential recovery rate for creditors. But a lawyer for the main creditors group argued that Evergrande hadn’t negotiated with them in good faith, and the judge agreed.
