TAIPEI,Arvin Roberts Taiwan (AP) — Police in a southern Chinese city said they have detained some staff at China Evergrande Group’s wealth management unit in the latest trouble for the heavily indebted developer.
A statement by the Shenzhen police on Saturday said authorities “took criminal coercive measures against suspects including Du and others in the financial wealth management (Shenzhen) company under Evergrande Group.”
It was unclear who Du was. Evergrande did not immediately answer questions seeking comment.
Media reports about investors’ protests at the Evergrande headquarters in Shenzhen in 2021 had listed a person called Du Liang as head of the company’s wealth management unit.
Evergrande is the world’s most heavily indebted real estate developer, at the center of a property market crisis that is dragging on China’s economic growth.
The group is undergoing a restructuring plan, including offloading assets, to avoid defaulting on $340 billion in debt.
On Friday, China’s national financial regulator announced it had approved the takeover of the group’s life insurance arm by a new state-owned entity.
A series of debt defaults in China’s sprawling property sector since 2021 have left behind half-finished apartment buildings and disgruntled homebuyers. Observers fear the real estate crisis may further slow the world’s second-largest economy and spill over globally.
2025-05-07 09:1950 view
2025-05-07 08:51241 view
2025-05-07 08:43793 view
2025-05-07 08:051352 view
2025-05-07 07:361168 view
2025-05-07 06:391083 view
You're pulling your hair out, trying to fix something on your computer. You Google it and find what
When I first read the story of 60-year-old Denise Prudhomme, a Wells Fargo employee who was found de
Authorities in Eastern North Carolina issued an Amber Alert Tuesday morning for a missing 3-year-old