The 41-year-old controls Country Garden Holdings, China’s biggest property developer by sales. His stake was largely transferred from his father Yang Guoqiang, who founded the company in Foshan, Guangdong province, in 1992.
Country Garden is also facing increasing liquidity stress. On Wednesday, the developer said it would sell shares at a nearly 13% discount to raise HK$2.83 billion ($361 million), from its closing price on Tuesday.
Part of the proceeds will be used to pay off the company’s offshore debt, he added.
“Mortgage boycotts are a dual threat to developers and the housing market,” Capital Economics analysts said in a report Wednesday.
They drew attention to the problem of cash-strapped developers unable to complete properties they have already sold, which is “holding back new buyers”. The boycotts have also made banks more cautious about issuing mortgages, which could further hurt real estate sales, they added.
In a report released earlier this week, S&P Global Ratings estimated that property sales in China could fall by a third this year due to mortgage strikes, because people think developers can’t complete pre-sold units on time – the most common way to sell homes in the country.
“Without sales, many more developers will collapse, which is both a financial and economic threat,” analysts at Capital Economics said.
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