# Vanke
Latest news and articles about Vanke
Total: 12 articles found

China’s Equity Rally Stumbles as Tech Sector Retreats Amid Trillion-Yuan Liquidity
China’s ChiNext Index led a market-wide retreat as investors locked in profits from the semiconductor sector despite massive trading volumes exceeding 2 trillion RMB. While tech slumped, real estate and power sectors showed resilience, highlighting a tactical rotation within a highly volatile liquidity-driven environment.

A State-Sponsored Lifeline for Vanke as Property Woes Deepen
Vanke has secured an additional 2.5 billion RMB loan from its state-owned largest shareholder, Shenzhen Metro, amid a historic 88.6 billion RMB annual loss. The developer is currently liquidating assets and restructuring executive pay to navigate a severe liquidity crisis and plummeting property sales.

A Tale of Two Chinas: High-Tech Rebound Masks Deepening Crisis in Property and Green-Tech
China's Q1 2026 earnings highlight a two-speed economy where the high-tech STAR Market saw profits surge by 200% while the property and solar sectors suffered massive losses. State-owned banks continue to provide the market's primary profit base, propping up the aggregate figures despite localized industry crises.

Austerity in the C-Suite: Vanke Institutionalizes Executive Accountability Amid Property Downturn
China's Vanke has implemented a restrictive new compensation structure for 2026, mandating that performance-based pay exceed 50% of total earnings and introducing its first-ever clawback mechanism. The policy formalizes a period of deep austerity for the company, which has seen executive payouts collapse by 88% since 2020.

The Great Divergence: China’s A-Share Market Reveals a Tale of Two Economies
Financial data from China's A-share market in 2025 shows a sharp divide between thriving high-tech manufacturing and a declining real estate sector. While firms like Foxconn and CATL are expanding, property giants face shrinking future revenues and severe liquidity risks.

The Great Divergence: Record Dividends Mask Deep Fractures in China’s Corporate Landscape
China's 2025 corporate earnings reveal a stark divide, where record-high dividends of 2.43 trillion RMB are being used to offset catastrophic losses in the property and solar sectors. While state-owned enterprises provide a floor for the market, the collapse of property giants like Vanke and the solar industry's slide into overcapacity signal deep structural challenges.

Vanke’s Shadow Empire: How Onewo Executives Opaque Supplier Web Siphoned Wealth During a Property Crisis
Investigative reports reveal that Onewo executives utilized a complex network of offshore shadow companies to siphon billions from Vanke's property services arm via rigged supplier contracts and middleman acquisition deals. This systemic extraction occurred even as Vanke faced historic losses, exposing severe governance failures within one of China's most prominent real estate groups.

Vanke’s RMB82bn Loss Exposes the Perils of China’s Manager‑Led Corporate Model
Vanke reported an expected RMB82 billion net loss for 2025 and disclosed urgent liquidity pressures, prompting a subsidised rescue loan from majority shareholder Shenzhen Metro Group. The collapse highlights alleged off‑balance liquidity channelling and structural incentives that rewarded senior managers even as shareholders and creditors suffered, reviving questions about the limits of the manager‑led corporate model in China.

Vanke Warns of an ¥82 Billion Loss for 2025, Underlining Deep Fault Lines in China’s Property Sector
Vanke expects a roughly ¥82 billion net loss for 2025, driven by falling development settlements, low margins and fresh impairment charges. While deliveries and service revenues remain steady and cost cuts continue, the company warns that earnings will stay under pressure as it pursues asset disposals and operational reforms.

Vanke’s Quiet Storm: Yu Liang’s Sudden Exit and the Debt Tightrope That Could Define China’s Property Comeback
Yu Liang retired from Vanke on January 8 but has been conspicuously absent since, fuelling internal rumours he may be under scrutiny. Vanke has just cleared a crucial debt extension, but heavy leverage and opaque off‑balance financing leave the company and its former boss vulnerable to further regulatory and financial shocks.

The Waning of a Real‑Estate Patriarch: How Wang Shi’s Personal Drama Exposes a Broader Fall from Grace
Wang Shi, the 75‑year‑old founder of Vanke, has been compelled to rebut marital split rumours as social‑media footage and changes in joint holdings signal a decoupling from his younger partner, Tian Pujun. The personal spectacle mirrors Wang's professional decline since the 2015 Vanke power struggle and failed post‑Vanke ventures, underscoring how attention economies and generational shifts can hollow out the authority of once‑powerful business figures.

Busy Slopes, Thin Margins: How China’s Ski Industry Is Being Forced to Reinvent Itself
China’s ski industry is booming in visitor numbers but struggling to turn foot traffic into sustainable profits. High fixed costs, short natural seasons, competition from indoor facilities and the collapse of property-financed models are forcing resorts to adopt four-season operations, flexible staffing and deeper service integration to survive.