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Evergrande seeks to offload assets as investor pressure grows

Chinese developer’s cash crunch draws scrutiny to investments in electric vehicles and theme parks

Off the coast of the southern Chinese island of Hainan, one of the world’s largest man-made archipelagoes is a fitting symbol for the ambitions of the highly indebted company that owns it.

China Evergrande’s Ocean Flower Island, an Rmb100bn ($15.5bn) project that is set to fully open next year and includes hotels, theme parks and an opera house, is part of the company’s long-term attempt to expand beyond its main business of building apartments across the country’s sprawling cities. 

But Ocean Flower Island, along with an exotic array of non-core assets that include an electric vehicle maker once worth more than Ford and a football club, is also a potential tool in Evergrande’s battle to cut its Rmb674bn debt pile as its ambitions run up against Beijing’s crackdown on leverage in the sector.

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