Real Estate

Shares of Chinese Estates pop as much as 15% after firm signals it could dump entire Evergrande stake

Key Points
  • Shares of investment holding firm Chinese Estates surged as high as 15.14% on Thursday morning, before later paring some of those gains to close 5.5% higher.
  • Those gains came after the company announced in an Hong Kong exchange filing Thursday plans to potentially dispose of its entire stake in developer China Evergrande Group.
  • Investors around the globe have been closely monitoring the situation surrounding debt-ridden Evergrande, with questions about over whether the developer will pay the interest due on a dollar-denominated bond on Thursday.

In this article

A man drives a cart past apartment buildings at China Evergrande Group's Life in Venice real estate and tourism development in Qidong, Jiangsu province, China, on Tuesday, Sept. 21, 2021.
Qilai Shen | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Hong Kong-listed shares of investment holding firm Chinese Estates surged on Thursday after the firm announced plans to potentially dispose of its entire stake in debt-ridden developer China Evergrande Group.

On Thursday morning, shares of Chinese Estates soared as high as 15.14%. Some of those gains were pared later in the session, but the stock still rose 5.5% on the day.

The gains came after Chinese Estates announced it had sold more than 108 million shares in China Evergrande Group — representing about 0.82% of Evergrande's issued share capital — from Aug. 30 to Sept. 21. The shares were sold at an average selling price of approximately 2.26 Hong Kong dollars (about $0.29), Chinese Estates announced on Thursday.

The investment holding firm also detailed plans to seek approval from shareholders for the potential disposable of Chinese Estates' remaining shares in China Evergrande Group, which represent about 5.66% of the troubled developer's issued share capital.

In the filing, China Estates said its directors are "cautious and concerned" about recent developments surrounding China Evergrande Group.

Just days earlier, its Chairman Lau Ming-Wai told CNBC's Emily Tan that Beijing has "all the tools" to solve the issue surrounding Evergrande.

"I think the mainland government is very well versed in handling events or shocks or crises, whether it's natural or man-made," Lau said. "I think they have all the tools in their tool box — whether it's monetary or fiscal, to solve this."

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Investors around the globe have been closely monitoring the Evergrande crisis, as questions remain over whether the developer will pay the interest due on a dollar-denominated bond on Thursday.

For its part, Hong Kong-listed shares of China Evergrande Group surged more than 17% on Thursday following days of losses. Reuters reported Thursday that China Evergrande Group's chairman said the firm's top priority is to help wealth investors redeem their products.

— CNBC's Emily Tan contributed to this report.