Evergrande Wealth Management Staff in China Detained by Police

Evergrande Wealth Management Staff in China Detained by Police

BEIJING, ⁢Sept 17⁤ (Reuters) – Police‍ in southern China have⁤ detained some staff at China Evergrande Group’s wealth management unit, suggesting a new investigation that could add ⁢to the property giant’s woes.”Recently, public security organs took criminal compulsory measures against Du and other suspected criminals ‌at Evergrande Financial Wealth Management Co.,” ‍Shenzhen city police said in a social media statement on Saturday night.During protests by disgruntled investors at⁤ Evergrande’s Shenzhen headquarters in 2021, Du Liang was identified by staff as general manager and legal‌ representative of Evergrande’s wealth management division.Reuters could not confirm that Du was ⁢among those detained, and the police statement did not specify the number of people detained, the charges or ‍the date they were⁤ taken into ⁤custody.China Evergrande did not⁢ immediately respond to a request for comment on Sunday outside of normal business hours.The police said the investigation into the financial management unit was ongoing and urged investors to report⁤ any further financial crimes.China Evergrande (3333.HK), the world’s most indebted ​property developer, is at the centre of a crisis in China’s property sector, which has seen a string of debt defaults since late⁤ 2021 that has dragged on the growth of the⁤ world’s second-largest economy.The group, currently ⁤undergoing a protracted debt restructuring which has seen it offload a range of assets, said‌ on Friday it has delayed making a decision​ on offshore debt restructuring from September to next month.Trade in Evergrande’s stock was suspended for 17 months until⁣ Aug. 28.Moody’s on Thursday cut the outlook on China’s property sector to‍ negative from ⁢stable,‍ citing economic challenges it said would dampen sales despite government support.Reporting by Laurie Chen ​and David Kirton in Shenzhen;‌ Editing by Tom HogueOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. Acquire Licensing Rights, opens new tab

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