That is the message from the troubled Chinese property giant.

A Reuters source says Chairman Hui Ka Yan set out a revival plan to staff over the weekend.

He reportedly set a goal of delivering 600,000 apartments this year.

And said there would be no fire sales in a bid to shift stock.

Instead Hui wants Evergrande to clear its debt by getting construction and sales activities back to normal.

The world's most indebted developer has been tottering under more than $300 billion in liabilities.

It's been struggling to pay creditors and suppliers, raising fears of a messy collapse that would ripple through financial markets.

Hui says Evergrande has almost $8 billion in escrow accounts to pay for construction, and more than three times that amount yet to be collected from sales.

He says the company can "get out of the woods" if work resumes at full tilt.