Evergrande triggers fears over China economy
Chinese company Evergrande has started to repay investors in its wealth management business with property, as the world's most indebted real estate developer faces a key test this week, the BBC reported.
Major banks have reportedly been told that they won't receive interest payments on loans that are due Monday, while interest payments of $84m on the firm's bonds are also due on Thursday.
The company's shares fell by 15 per cent in Hong Kong trade on Monday.
The property giant's deepening debt problems have triggered fears over the impact its potential collapse could have on China's economy, the report said.
Evergrande grew to be one of China's biggest companies by borrowing more than $300 billion.
Last year, Beijing brought in new rules to control the amount owed by big real estate developers.
The new measures led Evergrande to offer its properties at major discounts to ensure money was coming in to keep the business afloat.
Now, it is struggling to meet the interest payments on its debts.
This uncertainty has seen Evergrande's share price tumble by around 85 per cent this year. Its bonds have also been downgraded by global credit ratings agencies, the report added.
The financial fallout would be far reaching. Evergrande reportedly owes money to around 171 domestic banks and 121 other financial firms," the Economist Intelligence Unit's (EIU) Mattie Bekink told the BBC.
If Evergrande defaults, banks and other lenders may be forced to lend less.