China Aoyuan (3883) is standing by for a pivotal Hong Kong court decision on its restructuring plan, a ruling that may accelerate the end of its tussles with creditors over US$6 billion (HK$46.8 billion) of offshore debt.
After a two-day trial over a creditor's objection to the offshore plan offered by the defaulted developer ended earlier this week, Judge Jonathan Harris said he will deliver his decision today.
Harris' approval would enable the Guangzhou-based developer to clear a major hurdle in appeasing creditors and quickly shift to implementing the settlement terms. A denial would send Aoyuan back to negotiations with creditors that may drag out its two-year saga since its first default and further sap precious resources.
Any early rulings from the city's courts are closely watched given the slow pace of negotiations of Chinese developers, and may set legal precedents impacting bigger trials such as for China Evergrande (3333).
Aoyuan's offshore plan has been approved by a majority of its creditors. A Hong Kong court sanction of it seemed merely a formality until one of the objecting creditors petitioned the court to deny the plan.
Harris will make a call after considering the two sides' arguments, largely over fairness in treatment of creditor classes and the legitimacy of Aoyuan's assessment in how much investors would recover.
Separately, Chinese developer Yuzhou Properties (1628) said its sales dropped by nearly 50 percent to 17.8 billion yuan (HK$19.9 billion) last year.