Business Daily Media

Men's Weekly

.

3 ways the collapse of Evergrande will hurt the Australian economy

  • Written by Robert Powell, Professor, Edith Cowan University
3 ways the collapse of Evergrande will hurt the Australian economy

Evergrande, China’s second-largest property developer, is in peril. After a decade of massive growth, including investing in “Fairyland[1]” theme parks, an electric car company[2] and a professional football team (Guangzhou FC[3]), it is now struggling to service debts exceeding US$300 billion.

So far it has avoided the fate of dozens of its unfinished apartment towers — demolished in spectacular fashion in recent weeks — by selling off assets to make its payments.

But this is not a sustainable strategy. Credit rating agency Fitch has in the past week downgraded Evergrande[4] to a “C”, indicating exceptionally high risk[5], with default “imminent or inevitable, or the issuer is in standstill”.

Without intervention by the Chinese government, the company will collapse. Here are three key ways in which that could affect Australia.

1. Lower demand for iron ore

Evergrande’s collapse will reverberate throughout China’s real estate market. Investors and lenders will be more cautious, potentially resulting in a credit crunch. This could severely dampen property development, and thereby demand for construction materials including steel, made using mostly imported iron ore.

China is by far the world’s biggest steel producer, and accounts for nearly 70%[6] of global iron ore imports. About 60% of that iron ore has been imported from Australia.

This trade has made iron ore Australia’s most valuable export commodity, worth an estimated AU$149 billion[7] in the 2020-2021 financial year. About 75% went to China[8]. Any drop in Chinese demand will therefore affect the Australian economy.

China has already been seeking to cut back steel production[9], a high-energy process, to reduce carbon emissions. The iron ore price has halved since July.

Plummeting demand for iron ore

Iron ore spot price (US$ per tonne)
Iron ore spot price (US$ per tonne) tradingeconomics.com/[10]

Further falls in demand and thus prices will affect the Australian businesses and 45,600 jobs[11] employed directly by the industry, as well as the thousands of jobs sustained though their wages, and government revenues from mining-related royalties and taxes.

2. Overall weakening of China’s economy

Beyond the direct effects, problems in China’s real estate and financial sectors could ripple across China’s economy, hurting Chinese demand for other goods and services in which Australia is a major provider.

To put trade with China[12] in context, Australia’s exports to China are about three times those of our second-most valuable market, Japan. Even with iron-ore exports removed from the equation, China is still our biggest export market.

The effect of China buying less from Australia has been a matter of considerable debate. Some have argued Australia can compensate by diversifying into other markets. But such things take time. Economists Rod Tyers and Yixiao Zhou, who have simulated the effects[13] of Australia-China trade being shut down, have argued short-term effects could be severe.

Evergrande apartment buildings in Beijing.
Evergrande apartment buildings in Beijing. Roman Pilipey/EPA

3. Global contagion

Evergrande’s debt crisis has echoes of the case of Lehman Brothers, the US investment bank whose bankruptcy in 2008 played a big part in precipitating the Global Financial Crisis.

Although most of Evergrande’s debt is localised in China, in financial and real estate sectors there is always a risk of investors and banks in other markets getting spooked, leading to a credit crunch throughout global markets.

Australian share markets have already fallen off their highs over the past few weeks, certainly in part over concerns about China’s economy. The mining sector has experienced the real carnage[14], but there are indicators of general unease in falls across all sectors.

Will the Chinese government intervene?

Without external help Evergrande has a very high likelihood of failure. All the signs are there. It is averting bankruptcy by servicing the interest payments on its massive debt by selling assets at unfavourable prices.

All eyes are now on the Chinese government as a potential saviour through some form of debt restructure or guarantees.

Read more: Vital Signs: Evergrande may survive, but for its executives expect a fate worse than debt[15]

So far it has not committed itself[16], and it has taken a strong stance against high debt[17] by developers. But it may consider Evergrande “too big to fail” — its collapse having potentially disastrous local and global implications. So some form of intervention to stabilise the situation seems more likely than not.

Australians, and the rest of the world, will need to wait to see exactly what hand the Chinese government will play.

References

  1. ^ Fairyland (www.bloomberg.com)
  2. ^ electric car company (www.scmp.com)
  3. ^ Guangzhou FC (gzfc.evergrande.com)
  4. ^ downgraded Evergrande (www.fitchratings.com)
  5. ^ exceptionally high risk (info.creditriskmonitor.com)
  6. ^ nearly 70% (oec.world)
  7. ^ estimated AU$149 billion (publications.industry.gov.au)
  8. ^ 75% went to China (publications.industry.gov.au)
  9. ^ cut back steel production (www.9news.com.au)
  10. ^ tradingeconomics.com/ (tradingeconomics.com)
  11. ^ 45,600 jobs (www.minister.industry.gov.au)
  12. ^ trade with China (www.abs.gov.au)
  13. ^ effects (theconversation.com)
  14. ^ carnage (www.mining.com)
  15. ^ Vital Signs: Evergrande may survive, but for its executives expect a fate worse than debt (theconversation.com)
  16. ^ has not committed itself (www.nytimes.com)
  17. ^ strong stance against high debt (www.reuters.com)

Authors: Robert Powell, Professor, Edith Cowan University

Read more https://theconversation.com/3-ways-the-collapse-of-evergrande-will-hurt-the-australian-economy-168852

Technical Debt Stifling Path to AI Adoption for Global Enterprises

Outdated legacy technologies costing organisations the ability to innovate, money, time and potentially, even customers Technical debt and an ov...

Attract. Impress. Keep. The new small business growth playbook

Running a small business is a marathon that often feels like a sprint. You are chasing leads, juggling admin, building a brand and trying to carve...

Amazon to expand data centre infrastructure in Australia and strengthen AI

Amazon has announced plans to invest a new total of AU$20 billion from 2025 to 2029 to expand, operate, and maintain its data centre infrastructur...

How AI is Reshaping Banking in Australia

AI in the Banking and Financial Services Industry  From fraud detection and credit scoring to personalised financial advice, AI is transforming t...

Tracksuit set for growth after $38M investment

Tracksuit Raises $38M Series B to Accelerate Global Expansion and Boost its Growing US Presence VMG Partners leads oversubscribed round; Tracksui...

Deputy Launches Payroll in Australia: Purpose Built for Shift-Based Businesses

Deputy, the global people platform purpose-built for shift work, officially launched Deputy Payroll in Australia today — a seamless experience desig...

Sell by LayBy