Shares in China Evergrande Group jumped more than 8 percent on Tuesday morning after the embattled property developer said it had made initial progress in resuming construction work.
Company chairman Hui Ka Yan vowed in a meeting on Sunday to deliver 39,000 units of properties in December, compared with fewer than 10,000 in each of the previous three months.
Evergrande, grappling with over US$300 billion in liabilities and at risk of becoming China's biggest ever default, has been scrambling to raise cash by selling assets and shares.
The firm missed a deadline to pay offshore coupons worth US$82.5 million earlier this month, threatening to trigger cross-default on its roughly US$19 billion of international bonds.
Fitch and S&P downgraded Evergrande to "restricted default" and "selective default" respectively following the missed payment.
Evergrande has new coupon payments worth US$255 million due on Tuesday for its June 2023 and 2025 notes.
As of 0200 GMT, Evergrande shares were trading up 7.4 percent at HK$1.59, a one-week high, while the Hang Seng Index eased 0.4 percent.
(Reuters)
A man walks past a No Entry traffic sign near the headquarters of China Evergrande Group in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, China. (Reuters)