Evergrande was once China’s biggest real estate firm, with a stock market valuation of more than $50bn (£37bn), but collapsed into a debt-driven crisis in 2021 that has unravelled its business.
The court heard that the company had taken millions of dollars in pre-sale funding from potential house buyers that were not used for construction. Instead the funds were diverted to new projects which resulted in hundreds of unfinished properties across China.
Hui, also known as Xu Jiayin, rose from humble beginnings in rural China, where he was raised by his grandmother before venturing into property development and setting up Evergrande in 1996.
Evergrande’s downfall has often been cited as a trigger for China’s persistent property market slump, which spiralled downwards in 2021 and has weighed heavily on the country’s economic development.
At the time of its collapse, Evergrande had around 1,300 projects in the works across 280 cities in China.
Evergrande became known as the world’s most indebted property developer after much of its empire was built on $300bn of borrowed money.
But its business was dealt a blow when Beijing introduced new rules in 2020 to control property debt in the country, leading Evergrande to sell its properties at big discounts to ensure that money was coming in.





