In mid-September China’s Evergrande Group, the country’s 
second-largest property developer by sales, sparked fear in the global 
economy as the company’s market valuation plummeted to an 11-year low. 
Global economists have warned that if Evergrande defaults on its debts, 
it could start a credit contagion similar to the Lehman Brothers 
bankruptcy in 2007. So far, Evergrande has managed to dodge default on 
its loans three times in the past month, but Evergrande bondholder 
Deutsche Marktscreening Agentur (DMSA) seems to be preparing to file for
 bankruptcy against the real estate giant.
Credit Contagion Stemming From Real Estate Sector Looms — Evergrande Wobbles, Zillow Falters
The real estate market worldwide has issues and a number of 
occurrences have shown that major corporations dealing with properties 
are struggling. China’s Evergrande is just one piece of the puzzle as 
real estate markets across the globe are feeling a squeeze. For 
instance, the major real estate company Zillow revealed
 during the first week of November that the firm would stop buying and 
renovating properties. Furthermore, Zillow cut 25% of the company’s 
workforce as Zillow lost $304 million in Q3 2021.
China’s Evergrande has been wobbling for quite some time and on Wednesday people assumed the real estate giant would default on its bond payments. According to a letter
 from the bondholder DMSA, Evergrande failed to meet the interest 
payment deadline. Despite the DMSA claims and its attempts to get other 
bondholders to file bankruptcy against the Chinese real estate 
corporation, a Clearstream representative told Bloomberg that the company had received interest payments and Evergrande deferred default.
US Central Bank Warns Evergrande’s Problems Could Pose Risks to Global Economic Growth
This is the third time
 Evergrande has narrowly avoided default in the last 30 days and DMSA is
 not the only associated firm complaining. Rival Kaisa Group is one of 
Evergrande’s largest bondholders and has already begged for help
 from creditors and the Chinese government. No one knows if Beijing will
 continue to help Evergrande, but during the last few weeks, the 
company’s top executives have been meeting with China’s regulators and 
government officials.
Meanwhile, the U.S. Federal Reserve has also warned
 that Evergrande’s woes could spread globally if not dealt with soon, 
noting: “Stresses in China could strain global financial markets through
 a deterioration of risk sentiment, pose risks to global economic 
growth, and affect the United States.” As DMSA preps bankruptcy 
proceedings, the company’s senior analyst Marco Metzler brought up the 
Fed’s warning.
“While the international financial market has so far met the 
financial turmoil surrounding the teetering giant Evergrande with a 
remarkable basic confidence – one can also say: with remarkable naivety –
 the U.S. central bank Fed confirmed our view yesterday,” Metzler 
stressed. “In its latest stability report, it explicitly pointed out the
 dangers that a collapse of Evergrande could have for the global 
financial system,” the DMSA representative said.
Furthermore, the recently published Bloomberg report which quotes the
 Clearstream representative also quotes two unnamed Evergrande 
bondholders. According to the anonymous sources, Evergrande had 
distributed interest payments to them on Wednesday late afternoon (ET). 
The sources remained anonymous because “they weren’t authorized to speak
 publicly.” Evergrande’s distress has caused speculators to wonder
 whether or not the U.S. housing market will be the next to falter, 
especially after Zillow’s issues and the median home price in the 
country spiking over 25% in five quarters.
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