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Evergrande: Every year billions of dollars in profit, huge short-term assets, why is it still on the verge of bankruptcy?

One of the few times I agree with you. Obviously China's state-owned companies are going to swallow up the pieces.
China's state-owned companiesare too bad to do the bussiness, they are not smart enough to even make good and cheap containers to reduce the container's price now. They only make CN economy get even worse :lol:
 
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I think it's a miscalculation in risk management.

Perhaps if China real estate market is still as before China government curb the bubble, Evergrande is still fine today.

Because of sudden change, and the loan is a long-term loan, it becomes out of balance.


Imagine you earn USD 1000 a month, and need to pay the loan and interest USD 500 a month, it's still fine. Not to mention, by taking a loan, next year, your income will be USD 100.000. The market is very strong, the demand is huge and keeps growing. It's impossible if you don't take the opportunity.

But suddenly in the middle of the year, everything is changed, your income suddenly drops to USD 400, paying the loan and interest USD 500 is impossible. All your liquid money is already invested in good and no way to get the money unless you sell it first.

That's what happened to Evergrande.
No, the cause is when greed can't face reality and the gambling instinct kicks in and the leadership goes in survival mode. The bubble became bigger and their hopes became bigger but the facts and realities didn't change and it eventually caught up with them. Now will the Chinese gov put a spin on the disaster or accept reality and come out open?
 
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Google trans:

Evergrande has never reported a loss even once, short-term assets have always outstripped short-term liabilities, but the risk of bankruptcy is approaching. So what's the twist behind the nice numbers on the financial statements?

September 24, 2021 Evergrande's electric vehicle company is behind on staff salaries, overdue debt to suppliers
September 23, 2021WSJ: The Chinese government is preparing for Evergrande default scenario


The two most important financial metrics in a business are solvency and liquidity. Liquidity represents the long-term viability of the business, as measured by the relationship between liabilities and assets, or equity. If liabilities are greater than assets, or equity is negative, the business is insolvent. Liquidity indicates the ability to meet short-term financial obligations, as measured by the difference between current assets and current liabilities. If current assets are larger, then the company has enough resources to repay the debt in the near future. Whether a company goes bankrupt will directly depend on liquidity. In Vietnam, when an enterprise has less current assets than current liabilities, the auditor will cast doubt on its ability to continue as a going concern. With Evergrande - the world's most indebted real estate group, both payment and liquidity measures look good. Evergrande's financial statements are not quite as beautiful as a dream, but they are enough to make many businesses jealous. Historically, this corporation has never reported a loss. Equity is of course always positive. Current assets are also always larger than current liabilities in every reporting period. But many investors around the world are worried that Evergrande is about to go bankrupt, even becoming a Chinese version of Lehman Brothers.

In the first 6 months of 2021, Evergrande made a profit of about 9.3 billion yuan (NDT), equivalent to 1.4 billion USD.

No. 2 in China, No. 1 in the world

Evergrande today is known by two titles: China's second largest real estate group by revenue and the world's most indebted real estate company. Evergrande's history began in 1996 when it was established by owner Hua Gia An in Guangzhou city under the name of Hang Dai company. Both Evergrande and Hang Dai carry the meaning of greatness forever over time.

After years of growth driven mainly by debt, Evergrande now owns more than 1,300 real estate projects in 280 cities across China, the company's website says.

In 2020, Evergrande recorded revenue of about USD 106 billion, ranking 2nd in China. As of June 30 this year, the group's land bank includes 778 projects in 233 cities with an expected floor area of 214 million m2. Chairman Hua Gia An's group also strongly invests in outside the industry with many subsidiaries in the fields of electric vehicles (Evergrande New Energy Auto), internet and communication (HengTen Networks), amusement parks (Evergrande Fairyland). ), football (Guangzhoe FC), mineral water and food (Evergrande Spring), … The whole group has 200,000 employees and annually hires about 3.8 million additional workers to carry out construction projects.


The grand criterion of the corporation's name can be considered achieved, but its permanence is being questioned by the world. 300 billion USD debt bomb To own a huge number of projects and generate over $100 billion in revenue a year, Evergrande had to accumulate more than $300 billion in debt on its balance sheet, accounting for 83% of total capital. Paradox in Evergrande: Every year billions of dollars in profit, huge short-term assets, why is it still on the verge of bankruptcy? - Photo 4. Short-term debt is $238 billion, outstripping equity. Of which, loans from financial institutions are about $87 billion, the rest is payable to suppliers, homebuyers' deposits and other debt obligations. If Evergrande defaults on its debt, the individuals and institutions that have lent it to the group could also fall into a liquidity crisis, creating far-reaching knock-on effects. In 2018, a report by the People's Bank of China (PboC) identified Evergrande as one of the large enterprises capable of posing risks to the country's financial system.

However, concerns about Evergrande only really surfaced around this day last year when a secret document was posted on Chinese social media. The document includes a letter of request for help dated August 24, 2020, allegedly sent by Evergrande to the Guangdong provincial government and attached documents listing Evergrande's creditors with about 128 banks and 121 institutions. non-bank. The fact that the letter of "grievance" appeared shortly after the "three red lines" policy was adopted by China, has raised many speculations about Evergrande's financial health. In 2020, the People's Bank of China and the Ministry of Housing of China announced three criteria to grant "loan room" to real estate companies, which are: The ratio of liabilities to total assets should not exceed 70% ( excluding prepayments), the net debt-to-equity ratio should not exceed 100%, and the cash-to-short-term loan ratio should be at least 1.

Evergrande President Hua Gia An immediately declared the above document dated August 24, 2020 to be forged, seriously affecting the company's reputation and said that he had invited the police to investigate the culprit. .

However, a year later, on September 20, 2021, Evergrande was unable to pay the due interest of two major creditors.


Evergrande runs out of money, has to pay overdue debt with a house under construction
To investors and suppliers, this group offers to repay with unfinished real estate such as apartments, parking lots, ...

The letter leaked a year ago may or may not have been fake, but seems to accurately describe Evergrande's predicament.

Behind the numbers on Evergrande's report

According to the mid-2021 consolidated financial statements, Evergrande's short-term assets are about $296 billion, accounting for 82% of total assets and equivalent to 1.24 times short-term liabilities. Historically, the short-term asset/short-term debt ratio has always been greater than 1.

Notably, the largest item in Evergrande's short-term assets is construction in progress, worth nearly $192 billion. These are properties that the group believes can be completed within a financial year.

To complete these projects, the corporation will need to pour more money. Otherwise, very few people will want to buy unfinished houses, so the liquidity of assets is not high.



In other words, Evergrande's current assets cannot easily be converted into cash to settle short-term debt obligations.

This group wants to pay debt directly with unfinished projects, but few people are interested because of poor liquidity and many legal problems.

Paradox in Evergrande: Every year billions of dollars in profit, huge short-term assets, why is it still on the verge of bankruptcy? - Photo 7.
Even Evergrande's profits are suspected of being fake because if the company continued to make real profits, it wouldn't be so short of cash that it wouldn't be able to pay its debts.

One of the big problems with Evergrande in particular and Chinese businesses in general is that the investment losses are not fully accounted for.

When land and house prices fall, the real estate business should make a provision and record a decrease in inventory value. Then the profits, equity, and total assets of the business all decrease by the same amount.

If the enterprise does not record a decrease in inventory, the figures of assets, equity and profit on the financial statements will all be higher than it actually is.

Some experts estimate that about $220 billion of Evergrande's inventory is actually losses due to falling asset prices, but not properly accounted for. In other words, Evergrande's assets are being inflated and if recorded correctly, Evergrande will be negative in equity, insolvent.

Warning 9 years ago
For many people, this $220 billion figure doesn't come as much of a surprise.

Since June 2012, nearly a decade ago, the research firm Citron Research has released a report with the content of accusing Evergrande of accounting fraud and asserting that the company's equity must be negative.

According to Citron, Evergrande at that time exaggerated the cash value of about 17 billion yuan, inflated the real estate investment portfolio by 10 billion yuan, and inflated the value of the non-industry investment projects of Chairman Hua Jiayan 12. billion yuan, exaggerating the original land purchase price of 6 billion yuan, hiding debts worth 23 billion yuan ...

As Evergrande's scale has grown over time, the twists and turns in the company's accounting policies have also grown constantly, the numbers that used to be tens of billions of yuan have now become hundreds of billions of dollars.

Citron Research also accused Evergrande of bribing government officials to take over a huge land fund at a cheap price, receiving land and then leaving it empty for many years, and also cited many violent incidents between Evergrande and the people affected, …


Mr. Andrew Left, the founder of Citron Research at the time, did not know that Evergrande Chairman Xu Gia An was one of the richest and most connected people in China.

Mr. Left was sued in court. According to this founder, during the course of the lawsuit, Evergrande has always been carefully protected, the authorities in Hong Kong did not allow Citron to learn any information from Evergrande.



After 7 years of legal fighting and millions of dollars in costs, Andrew Left lost the lawsuit. He was banned from trading on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange for five years from October 2016 to October 2021.

The ban period with Mr. Left is almost over, many of the analyzes in his report nine years ago have also been proven by time. The big question now is whether the relationships that have helped Evergrande win the case before can help this group be rescued from the brink of bankruptcy? Beijing does not want the economy to incur systemic risk, but it also cannot allow moral hazard to take root in the heads of oligarchs.


Evergrande is just like CNese here, never admit a single loss after WW2, everything from CN is alway the best , but suddently they are facing the great risk of collapse :lol:
Guys from the article it appears that due to covid crisis evergrande is failing to complete the projects as people are not paying for the projects. However this is not anything like lehman brothers.

Remember evergrande is not like a bank who was financing houses on perceived value. Evergrande is in business of construction and value of the assets represent the actual expense incurred. So these assets are for real.

The problem with grande is inability to sell those projects due to overall economic uncertainty.

All they have to do is to restructure the debts so that they can delay the liabilities and invilve some investors to complete the projects which are not being sold as of today.

Except for some of the project which the people dont like most of them will be sold at a profit once they get a temporary relief.

For projects which are poorly designed, has to be sold at a loss but that also cant be significant considering all assets of evergrande are at cost.

Lehman brother or 2008 financial crisis was on the back of inflated house prices as houses were being traded at very high cost to get bank loans. Actual value of houses were really low. Here the case is different.

So its a timing difference and few bad projects v/s 2008 financial crisis where every asset in house financing was priced 3 to 4 times higher than the actual value
 
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Instead of penning personal opinions based wild imagination, why don't the trolls in here just do some research instead and find out the real reason if they are really interested.

A hint: it is related the the 4 redmarks newly enforced by China's strict regulators to ensure that all these overly ambitious developers have sufficient liquidity.

What Evergrande faces is just an acute cashflow.

They have sufficient assets e.g. land banks, etc to cover all these hiccups.
Example: Their EV project is now suspended.

Lehman Bros. Fanny Mae????

:sarcastic: :sarcastic: :sarcastic:
 
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Why would china bother bailkng out anprivate entity

It however will bail out th customees i.e force evergrande to use money to complete projects paid for rather then paying debt collectors

Those who gave moneu understood the risks
 
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Guys from the article it appears that due to covid crisis evergrande is failing to complete the projects as people are not paying for the projects. However this is not anything like lehman brothers.

Remember evergrande is not like a bank who was financing houses on perceived value. Evergrande is in business of construction and value of the assets represent the actual expense incurred. So these assets are for real.

The problem with grande is inability to sell those projects due to overall economic uncertainty.

All they have to do is to restructure the debts so that they can delay the liabilities and invilve some investors to complete the projects which are not being sold as of today.

Except for some of the project which the people dont like most of them will be sold at a profit once they get a temporary relief.

For projects which are poorly designed, has to be sold at a loss but that also cant be significant considering all assets of evergrande are at cost.

Lehman brother or 2008 financial crisis was on the back of inflated house prices as houses were being traded at very high cost to get bank loans. Actual value of houses were really low. Here the case is different.

So its a timing difference and few bad projects v/s 2008 financial crisis where every asset in house financing was priced 3 to 4 times higher than the actual value
Thats true, Evergrande is not like a bank, they can simply sell some assets and take the money back. What I wanna say here is that :

1. We can not trust CN data. Just like In 2020, Evergrande recorded revenue of about USD 106 billion, ranking 2nd in China, but in 2021 its collapsing now

2. Evergrande is just the first domino to fall, the much bigger problem is that CN economy is already felt into the middle income trap when reaching GDP per capita of 10,000 USD per month like Lybia. Factories keep leaving CN (to VN) bcs the bosses don't wanna pay 1,000 usd per month for CN workers just like Lybia bosses refused to pay 1,000 usd per month for Lybian workers when they can hire foreign workers with just 400 usd per month.

When the employee don't have jobs or their salaries are cut to half like in CN and Lybia, of course they don't have money to buy houses. the collapse of Evergrande is unavoidable, thats why CN govt don't rescue them. The next domino could happen in manufacturing sector where bosses refuse to pay 1,000 usd per month for CN workers and CN workers refuse to work bcs 500 to 600 USD per month is not enough for Cnese to pay for living cost and home loans.

Imagine what happen when 60% to 65% factories in CN suddenly go bankrupted or closed bcs the bosses can not get any profit when they must pay 1,000 usd per month for CN workers ?? then CN unemployment rate would reach to 50 % as I predicted.
 
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Guys from the article it appears that due to covid crisis evergrande is failing to complete the projects as people are not paying for the projects. However this is not anything like lehman brothers.

Remember evergrande is not like a bank who was financing houses on perceived value. Evergrande is in business of construction and value of the assets represent the actual expense incurred. So these assets are for real.

The problem with grande is inability to sell those projects due to overall economic uncertainty.

All they have to do is to restructure the debts so that they can delay the liabilities and invilve some investors to complete the projects which are not being sold as of today.

Except for some of the project which the people dont like most of them will be sold at a profit once they get a temporary relief.

For projects which are poorly designed, has to be sold at a loss but that also cant be significant considering all assets of evergrande are at cost.

Lehman brother or 2008 financial crisis was on the back of inflated house prices as houses were being traded at very high cost to get bank loans. Actual value of houses were really low. Here the case is different.

So its a timing difference and few bad projects v/s 2008 financial crisis where every asset in house financing was priced 3 to 4 times higher than the actual value
Certainly it’s not the same story. Lehman’s $600b debts were twice of evergrands. However there are similarities. We can assume Evergrands has never made profits. To camouflage the losses the boss borrowed $300b and gave himself $8b as dividends.
He is the smartest guy in the room.
 
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Factories keep leaving CN (to VN) bcs the bosses don't wanna pay 1,000 usd per month for CN workers just like Lybia bosses refused to pay 1,000 usd per month for Lybian workers when they can hire foreign workers with just 400 usd per month.

Vietnam is the one that's actually stuck in the low income trap. I noticed you like talking about Libya so I started looking at Libya.

143 Libya 3,617
144 Vietnam 3,609

You laugh at Libya? Libya is richer than you even today. How embarassing.
 
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Certainly it’s not the same story. Lehman’s $600b debts were twice of evergrands. However there are similarities. We can assume Evergrands has never made profits. To camouflage the losses the boss borrowed $300b and gave himself $8b as dividends.
He is the smartest guy in the room.
Why to assume evergrande never made profits?

Both r not similar. One is bank another is construction company. One is purchasing or lending on market value which could be much higher than the actual cost and other is valuing on construction cost. So even if the market decline it is not going to go lower than cost. The max risk is delay in sales but not at lower than cost.
 
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Vietnam is the one that's actually stuck in the low income trap. I noticed you like talking about Libya so I started looking at Libya.

143 Libya 3,617
144 Vietnam 3,609

You laugh at Libya? Libya is richer than you even today. How embarassing.
Libya in 2010 before uprising was $12,000 , same like CN now. About 60% of CN factories are Zombie factories now bcs bosses don't wanna pay 1,000 usd per month for CN workers just like Lybia bosses refused to pay 1,000 usd per month for Lybian workers when they can hire foreign workers with just 400 usd per month.

Lybia.PNG


What happen when those CN Zombie factories closed or bankrupted ?? CN GDP per capital could drop to 3,617 like Lybia now plus chaos is everywhere :pop:
 
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Why to assume evergrande never made profits?

Both r not similar. One is bank another is construction company. One is purchasing or lending on market value which could be much higher than the actual cost and other is valuing on construction cost. So even if the market decline it is not going to go lower than cost. The max risk is delay in sales but not at lower than cost.

You should know that Evergrande get the money from the banks. It still has relation to financial institution. From What I heard now China state owned enterprises are helping by buying some of their stakes to keep Evergrande afloat and has cash, around 1.5 billion USD.

The amount of severity will be seen on whether some big banks have huge exposure on Evergrande. Which banks ? Then will it prompt some kind of rush where people are getting their money from the banks and it can actually collapse the financial institutions if the lenders are big banks ?

Evergrande assets is also not in cash, but unfinished property projects, if they get bankrupt, it will be not easy to sell the assets, so the banks that lend them money will get pressure. And the dangerous thing is something that I have stated above in term of people who put their money on banks, if rush will happen, then it can create disaster.

This could be 2big2 Fail case where in the end, China government will do the bailed out or buy their stakes ( have already happened) to make them have cash to finish the projects
 
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You should know that Evergrande get the money from the banks. It still has relation to financial institution. From What I heard now China state owned enterprises are helping by buying some of their stakes to keep Evergrande afloat and has cash, around 1.5 billion USD.

The amount of severity will be seen on whether some big banks have huge exposure on Evergrande. Which banks ? Then will it prompt some kind of rush where people are getting their money from the banks and it can actually collapse the financial institutions if the lenders are big banks ?

Evergrande assets is also not in cash, but unfinished property projects, if they get bankrupt, it will be not easy to sell the assets, so the banks that lend them money will get pressure. And the dangerous thing is something that I have stated above in term of people who put their money on banks, if rush will happen, then it can create disaster.

This could be 2big2 Fail case where in the end, China government will do the bailed out or buy their stakes ( have already happened) to make them have cash to finish the projects

Evergrande group sold its shares in Shengjing bank, Evergrande automobile and Bingquan mineral water to two state-owned enterprises. Before Evergrande group reduced its debt ratio to less than 70%, Evergrande group could not borrow from state-owned banks, Evergrande group could not return to a shares, and did not sell its shares. Evergrande group does not have much debt in the bank (see the picture list). Evergrande group's debt mainly comes from Wall Street.
179df054400263803fef97c8.jpg!800.jpg
 
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Libya in 2010 before uprising was $12,000 , same like CN now. About 60% of CN factories are Zombie factories now bcs bosses don't wanna pay 1,000 usd per month for CN workers just like Lybia bosses refused to pay 1,000 usd per month for Lybian workers when they can hire foreign workers with just 400 usd per month.

View attachment 780988

What happen when those CN Zombie factories closed or bankrupted ?? CN GDP per capital could drop to 3,617 like Lybia now plus chaos is everywhere :pop:

When US was in economic trouble in the late 1980's and there was Iraq with 4000 GDP per capita, guess what happened to Iraq a few years later?

Iraq_GDP_per_capita_1950-2008.png
 
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. Evergrande group's debt mainly comes from Wall Street.
Evergrande gave workers a choice: lend us money or lose your bonus


When struggling Chinese real estate giant Evergrande ran out of cash earlier this year, it turned to its own employees with a strong case: Those who wanted to keep their bonuses should give Evergrande a short loan. term.
Some workers have asked friends and family for money to lend to the company. Others borrowed from the bank. Then, this month, Evergrande suddenly stopped repaying the loans, which had been billed as high-interest investments.
Today, hundreds of employees joined panicked homebuyers to demand reimbursement from Evergrande, rallying outside the company’s offices across China to protest last week.
Once China’s most prolific real estate developer, Evergrande has grown into the country’s most indebted company. It owes money to lenders, suppliers and foreign investors. He owes unfinished apartments to homebuyers and has racked up over $ 300 billion in unpaid bills. Evergrande faces lawsuits from creditors and has seen its shares lose more than 80% of their value this year.
Regulators fear that the collapse of a company the size of Evergrande will cause upheavals throughout China’s financial system. Yet, so far, Beijing has not intervened with a bailout, having promised to teach the indebted corporate giants a lesson.
Anger demonstrations led by homebuyers – and now the company’s own employees – could change that calculation.
Evergrande is at the mercy of buyers of nearly 1.6 million apartments, according to one estimate, and could owe tens of thousands of its employees money. While Beijing remains relatively silent on the future of the company, those who are owed money say they are getting impatient.
“We’re running out of time,” said Jin Cheng, a 28-year-old employee from the eastern city of Hefei, who said he invested $ 62,000 of his own money in Evergrande Wealth, the investment arm of the company, on demand. senior management.
As rumors circulated on the Chinese internet that Evergrande could go bankrupt this month, Mr. Jin and some of his colleagues gathered outside provincial government offices to pressure authorities to intervene.
In the southern city of Shenzhen, homebuyers and workers crowded into the lobby of Evergrande’s headquarters last week and screamed for reimbursement. “Evergrande, give back my money that I earned with blood and sweat!” some could be heard screaming in video footage.

 
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This could be 2big2 Fail case where in the end, China government will do the bailed out or buy their stakes ( have already happened) to make them have cash to finish the projects
There are too many companies need to be bailed out in CN now. CN Toursim industry is dead due to Covid and it is badly wanna be bailed out now, 60% CN factories are just like Zombie factories where they can't make any profit due to 25% tariff and due to bosses don't wanna pay 1,00usd per month for CN workers as CN GDP per capita is $10,000 now and it is also badly need to be bailed out, too.

For someone who still believe CN is still the wolrd factory, this article may help them understand that people would rather wait for few more weeks to get the Sensor-shift OIS stabilizes sensors on the camera from VN than from CN bcs labour cost in CN is just too high now.

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iPhone 13 delivery times lengthen as COVID hits suppliers in Vietnam
Camera module constraints add more pressure as China power cuts hit supply chain
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Apple's newly launched iPhone 13 has encountered production snags, partially associated with problems in COVID-hit Vietnam. (Photo by Arisa Moriyama)
LAULY LI, CHENG TING-FANG, and LIEN HOANG, Nikkei staff writersSeptember 29, 2021 12:02 JST
TAIPEI/HO CHI MINH CITY -- Buyers of Apple's new iPhone 13 are facing longer-than-expected delivery times due to the COVID wave in Vietnam and the U.S. tech giant's deployment of a new camera feature, Nikkei Asia has learned.
The disruption is mainly associated with constrained supplies of camera modules for the four iPhone 13 models because a significant number of its component parts are assembled in Vietnam, according to people familiar with the matter.
Supply chain sources had expected this year's rollout of new iPhones to be relatively smooth, given that most changes to the updated devices are only incremental and Apple has been able to stockpile many key components.

But the company has expanded the use of its new sensor-shift optical image stabilization (OIS) to all four iPhone models when previously it was only in the premium iPhone 12 Pro Max. This has put suppliers in the position of having to ramp up production without jeopardizing production quality, against the backdrop of severe restrictions due to COVID.
Sensor-shift OIS stabilizes sensors on the camera to make images smoother and video steadier even if users are in motion, and it is an improvement on previous technology that stabilized camera lenses.
"Assemblers can still produce the new iPhones, but there's a supply gap [in] that the inventories of the camera modules are running low," one of the executives with direct knowledge told Nikkei Asia. "There's nothing we can do but to monitor the situation in Vietnam every day and wait for them to ramp up the output."
The situation may improve as soon as around mid-October as production at one of the key iPhone camera module manufacturing facilities in southern Vietnam has gradually resumed in recent days after several months of on-and-off disruption, another executive familiar with the situation told Nikkei.
The current waiting time for an iPhone 13 Pro Sierra Blue with 512 gigabytes (GB) of storage is up to five weeks in China -- Apple's third-largest market -- while waiting time for the same model is also five weeks in Japan and four weeks in the U.S., according to the company's website. Even waiting time for the iPhone 13 mini, which comes with the smallest screen of the four new iPhones, is seven to 10 days in China and the U.S. and up to 15 days in Japan.

Apple declined to comment for this story.
https%253A%252F%252Fs3-ap-northeast-1.amazonaws.com%252Fpsh-ex-ftnikkei-3937bb4%252Fimages%252F_aliases%252Farticleimage%252F2%252F0%252F8%252F6%252F36626802-1-eng-GB%252FGettyImages-1235396374.jpg
Vietnam, an emerging tech manufacturing powerhouse, has been suffering from a surge in COVID cases since April. © Getty Images
Like other companies, Apple has been wrestling with unprecedented chip and component shortages for the whole year that have held back its revenues. It has diverted some chips meant for its new iPads for use in the iPhone 13 series, which has also led to longer-than-expected delivery times for the new iPad and iPad mini, one of the people with direct knowledge said. Apple has limited consumers in China to a maximum of two iPad purchases for the newly launched models, its website showed, a sign that these supplies are also constrained.
Meanwhile, many Apple suppliers are now scrambling to respond to a widespread production stoppage this week in several Chinese cities in Jiangsu, Zhejiang and Guangdong provinces -- home to many tech manufacturers. Beijing's tightening control of energy consumption has led to a halt in industrial power supply across the provinces.
So far, key iPhone assemblers Foxconn, Pegatron and Luxshare have not yet been significantly affected by the power cuts, Nikkei learned. But still unknown is the scope of a potential chain reaction from production halts at the makers of materials, components, modules and parts. Suppliers are worried about another wave of unexpected power supply stoppages next month.
Vietnam, an emerging tech manufacturing powerhouse that has received a boost from the U.S.-China trade conflict, has been suffering from a surge in COVID cases since April. The southern part of the country, including Ho Chi Minh City and Binh Duong Province, where some tech suppliers are based, has been heavily hit by the delta variant.
Suppliers for the likes of Apple, Netflix, Nike and Ikea were forced to suspend production in mid-July as the government imposed strict measures to contain the deadliest wave of the virus so far. Companies could stay open only if workers lived on-site, although it has since allowed more factories to reopen if workers are vaccinated, tested regularly and living in uninfected areas.
The U.S., European and South Korean chambers of commerce in Vietnam -- all representing key foreign investors -- earlier this month voiced concerns to the Vietnamese government that overly strict COVID lockdown measures could risk businesses' willingness to invest in the Southeast Asia nation. One survey showed 20% of companies have already shifted production abroad.
Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh on Saturday said the government aims to bring the country back to something resembling normal by the end of this month.
"There's indeed a constrained supply of camera modules for the iPhone 13 series due to the pandemic, but the impact on the shipment of the new iPhones should still be manageable," Eddie Han, a senior analyst with Isaiah Research, told Nikkei Asia, citing his supply chain checks.
Han said it would be worrisome if the power supply restrictions in China continue to affect printed circuit boards, materials and petrochemical suppliers, as then it will likely impact component supplies for iPhones in the coming quarter.
 
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