Trading in NEV shares was suspended at 0152 GMT on Thursday, after the price dropped 5.4%.
A new bankruptcy proceeding could add pressure on the liquidators of China Evergrande Group, the world's most indebted property developer, to recover debt for creditors and a potential investor in the electric vehicle company.
Zhejiang Chint Electrics filed a bankruptcy and liquidation petition against manufacturing unit Evergrande Hengchi New Energy Vehicle (Shanghai) Co in relation to an overdue and unpaid debt, according to a filing dated Sept. 4 by the No.3 Intermediate People's Court of Shanghai.
The court said it will hold a hearing on Sept. 18 to decide to accept the petition or not to start a bankruptcy proceeding.
Last month, a Guangzhou court ordered two other units - Evergrande New Energy Vehicle (Guangdong) and Evergrande Smart Automotive (Guangdong) - to enter into bankruptcy and reorganisation proceedings, a move that the EV parent warned would have "a material impact" on its production and operating activities.
Evergrande NEV last week announced a net loss of 20.3 billion yuan ( USD 2.9 billion) in the first half, widening from a 6.9 billion net loss a year ago.
Its total liabilities rose 2.5% from end-December to 74.4 billion yuan, while total assets decreased 53% to 16.4 billion yuan and total cash plunged 69% to 39 million yuan.
The company's auditor said the material uncertainties from the financial results may have significant impact on the group's ability to continue as a going concern.
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