<p>From rural poverty to real-estate billions, the fortunes of Xu Jiayin mirrored China's runaway economic growth for much of the past two decades -- but now he is battling to save his Evergrande conglomerate from a quagmire of debt.</p>.<p>The 63-year-old was once China's richest man, with a taste for luxury labels and yachts, and a nose for praising the Communist Party that steered the economy to a home-ownership boom.</p>.<p>Xu's wealth was estimated at $43 billion four years ago, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.</p>.<p>But that is now down to $8 billion as Evergrande sags under hundreds of billions of dollars of debt and fears mount of a collapse that could ricochet across the global economy.</p>.<p>Xu, whose mother died when he was a year old, recalled in a 2017 speech how he ate only sweet potato and steamed bread in his school years.</p>.<p>"The sheets I laid, the quilts I covered, and the clothes I wore were all covered with piles of patches," said Xu, also known as Hui Ka Yan in Cantonese.</p>.<p>"At that time, my greatest wish was to go out of the countryside, find a job and be able to eat better food."</p>.<p>After leaving school in 1976 -- the end of the decade-long Cultural Revolution -- he struggled to find work.</p>.<p>As colleges reopened, Xu studied metallurgy and was later assigned to a state-run steel factory.</p>.<p>He left in 1992 for Shenzhen, the buzzing heart of China's reform and opening-up experiment in the 1990s, before founding Evergrande in 1996.</p>.<p>Evergrande threw itself into mass development, building in-demand apartments across China and capitalising on its rapid wealth accumulation.</p>.<p>The group listed in Hong Kong in 2009, raising HK$70.5 billion (US$9 billion) in its initial public offering, making it China's largest private real-estate company and Xu the mainland's richest man.</p>.<p>In 2010, Xu bought the struggling Guangzhou football team, renaming it Guangzhou Evergrande and pouring money into world-class players and coaches.</p>.<p>A football novice when he bought the club, Xu helped the team win eight league championships.</p>.<p>According to the SuperYachtFan website, Xu is the owner of a $60-million yacht.</p>.<p>He also has a private jet, which Australian media reported he used for scouting out Sydney development opportunities in 2014.</p>.<p>Xu also became known for a love of luxury labels, particularly French brand Hermes -- earning the nickname "Belt Xu" after wearing a Hermes belt for the national political congress in 2012.</p>.<p>Some have speculated his success has come from useful close relationships, including with the brother of former premier Wen Jiabao.</p>.<p>Xu has attributed his success to education -- and the Communist Party.</p>.<p>"Without the resumption of the national college entrance examination, I am still in the countryside. Without a state grant of 14 yuan, I couldn't go to university. Without the country's reform and opening up, Evergrande is not what it is today," he said.</p>.<p>"Everything of Evergrande is given by the Party, the state and the society."</p>.<p>But Xu is now facing a government crackdown on extreme wealth, with President Xi Jinping leading a drive for "common prosperity" against vast wealth.</p>.<p>Evergrande started to falter under the new "three red lines" imposed on developers in a state crackdown in August 2020 -- forcing the group to offload properties at increasingly steep discounts.</p>.<p><strong>Check out DH's latest videos:</strong></p>
<p>From rural poverty to real-estate billions, the fortunes of Xu Jiayin mirrored China's runaway economic growth for much of the past two decades -- but now he is battling to save his Evergrande conglomerate from a quagmire of debt.</p>.<p>The 63-year-old was once China's richest man, with a taste for luxury labels and yachts, and a nose for praising the Communist Party that steered the economy to a home-ownership boom.</p>.<p>Xu's wealth was estimated at $43 billion four years ago, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.</p>.<p>But that is now down to $8 billion as Evergrande sags under hundreds of billions of dollars of debt and fears mount of a collapse that could ricochet across the global economy.</p>.<p>Xu, whose mother died when he was a year old, recalled in a 2017 speech how he ate only sweet potato and steamed bread in his school years.</p>.<p>"The sheets I laid, the quilts I covered, and the clothes I wore were all covered with piles of patches," said Xu, also known as Hui Ka Yan in Cantonese.</p>.<p>"At that time, my greatest wish was to go out of the countryside, find a job and be able to eat better food."</p>.<p>After leaving school in 1976 -- the end of the decade-long Cultural Revolution -- he struggled to find work.</p>.<p>As colleges reopened, Xu studied metallurgy and was later assigned to a state-run steel factory.</p>.<p>He left in 1992 for Shenzhen, the buzzing heart of China's reform and opening-up experiment in the 1990s, before founding Evergrande in 1996.</p>.<p>Evergrande threw itself into mass development, building in-demand apartments across China and capitalising on its rapid wealth accumulation.</p>.<p>The group listed in Hong Kong in 2009, raising HK$70.5 billion (US$9 billion) in its initial public offering, making it China's largest private real-estate company and Xu the mainland's richest man.</p>.<p>In 2010, Xu bought the struggling Guangzhou football team, renaming it Guangzhou Evergrande and pouring money into world-class players and coaches.</p>.<p>A football novice when he bought the club, Xu helped the team win eight league championships.</p>.<p>According to the SuperYachtFan website, Xu is the owner of a $60-million yacht.</p>.<p>He also has a private jet, which Australian media reported he used for scouting out Sydney development opportunities in 2014.</p>.<p>Xu also became known for a love of luxury labels, particularly French brand Hermes -- earning the nickname "Belt Xu" after wearing a Hermes belt for the national political congress in 2012.</p>.<p>Some have speculated his success has come from useful close relationships, including with the brother of former premier Wen Jiabao.</p>.<p>Xu has attributed his success to education -- and the Communist Party.</p>.<p>"Without the resumption of the national college entrance examination, I am still in the countryside. Without a state grant of 14 yuan, I couldn't go to university. Without the country's reform and opening up, Evergrande is not what it is today," he said.</p>.<p>"Everything of Evergrande is given by the Party, the state and the society."</p>.<p>But Xu is now facing a government crackdown on extreme wealth, with President Xi Jinping leading a drive for "common prosperity" against vast wealth.</p>.<p>Evergrande started to falter under the new "three red lines" imposed on developers in a state crackdown in August 2020 -- forcing the group to offload properties at increasingly steep discounts.</p>.<p><strong>Check out DH's latest videos:</strong></p>