Asia’s richest woman loses half of her fortune due to housing crisis

Asia’s richest woman saw to fortune melt by half this week because of the crisis of real estate in Chine. This is the discreet Yang Huiyan, whose capital was valued in 2021 at 23.7 billion dollars.

According to the classification Bloomberg of the billionaires published this Thursday, his fortune is only 11.3 billion dollars today. Yang Huiyan is indeed the shareholder majority stake in Country Garden, one of China’s largest property developers. The company had achieved the highest turnover in the sector last year despite a real estate crisis.

A badly perceived share sale

Some groups are fighting for their survival like Evergrande, strangled by a slate of some 300 billion dollars. Country Garden is in better health, but is still trying to increase its liquidity as payment deadlines approach. The group put new shares up for sale on Wednesday to raise funds, a move seen by the markets as a sign of vulnerability.

The Country Garden share thus lost 15% of its value at the stock market of Hong Kong, effectively reducing Yang Huiyan’s personal fortune. The 40-year-old has become a billionaire since inheriting shares from her father, the founder of Country Garden, in 2005.

A fragile and over-indebted sector

The housing reform in China (1998) created a genuine real estate market and led to a meteoric boom in the sector, maintained by social norms, the acquisition of property often being a prerequisite for marriage. But debt massive number of promoters is perceived by the authorities as a major risk for the country’s economy and finances.

To reduce this debt, Beijing has gradually tightened since 2020 the conditions of access to credit for promoters, drying up the sources of financing for groups already in debt. A wave of defaults followed, including that of the Evergrande group. The former Chinese number one in real estate is soon to unveil the beginnings of a restructuring plan.

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