Wednesday, April 24, 2024 | Shawwal 14, 1445 H
scattered clouds
weather
OMAN
33°C / 33°C
EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Wanda to sell off $9.3 billion in assets to rein in debt

1055479
1055479
minus
plus

SHANGHAI: Chinese conglomerate Wanda said on Monday it will sell dozens of hotels and other projects to developer Sunac China Holdings in a $9.3 billion deal to reduce debt, two weeks after acknowledging it was under government financial scrutiny following heavy overseas investments.


Wanda, headed by one of China’s richest men, Wang Jianlin, had been one of the most acquisitive companies in a flood of Chinese money overseas that raised official concerns over “irrational” investments.


In a brief joint statement, the two companies said Sunac would buy 76 hotels outright, without specifying which properties. Sunac also will take a 91 per cent stake in 13 other “cultural and tourism projects” within China.


Wang subsequently fleshed out the reasons in an interview with financial magazine Caixin, saying that after the sale the amount of debt held by the group’s commercial real estate arm Wanda Commercial Properties would “drop greatly.”


He did not give an overall figure for the company’s debt.


“The funds returned from this will all be used to pay back loans. Wanda Commercial plans to pay back the majority of bank loans within this year,” he was quoted saying.


The deal highlights a quandary being faced by Chinese corporations that bet big on overseas acquisitions but now face difficulty paying off debts.


Beijing began last year to roll out restrictions to curb overseas capital flight, which analysts said raises funding costs to companies like Wanda as lending to them is now viewed as more risky due to the constraints they face.


Wanda admitted two weeks ago that China’s banking regulator had ordered an inspection of potentially risky loans to major Chinese companies that have invested aggressively overseas.


It said other domestic companies caught up in the review include Rossoneri Sport Investment Lux, a consortium that recently purchased Italian soccer club AC Milan, Club Med owner Fosun Group, and HNA Group. — AFP


SHARE ARTICLE
arrow up
home icon