Chinese tech billionaire vanishes, according to the business

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Chinese tech billionaire vanishes, according to the business

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text dp_text_size=”size-4″]After the company’s shares fell sharply in Hong Kong on Friday, the investment bank China Renaissance announced that its billionaire Chinese chairman had vanished. Bao Fan, a prominent figure in the Chinese IT sector and the bank’s executive director, was instrumental in the development of numerous domestic online firms.

In a statement to the Hong Kong Stock Exchange on Thursday, China Renaissance stated simply, “The business has been unable to contact Mr. Bao.” Following the statement, the company’s shares initially fell by as much as 50% before making a comeback to settle at a 30 percent loss.

The 52-year-old dealmaker had been unavailable for two days as of Thursday night, according to financial news source Caixin. After being approached by AFP, China Renaissance was unavailable for comment right away. As President Xi Jinping continues his ongoing fight against corruption, Bao’s absence is now causing worries about a potential new crackdown on China’s finance sector.

Given that Bao is the company’s major employee, Willer Chen, senior analyst at Forsyth Barr Asia, told Bloomberg that the executive’s ongoing absence “may be a long-term cloud on the stock.” When asked about Bao’s disappearance, China’s foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin responded that he was “not aware of the relevant information.” But I can assure you that China is a nation governed by the law, he added.

According to the law, “the Chinese government upholds the legal rights of its citizens.” With more than 700 staff members and locations in Beijing, Shanghai, Hong Kong, Singapore, and New York, China Renaissance has grown into a major financial organisation. Xiao was one of China’s wealthiest individuals at the time of his arrest, with an estimated net worth of $6 billion. Cong Lin, the president of China Renaissance, was detained in September of last year as a result of an investigation into his work at the state-owned bank ICBC’s financial leasing division, claims Caixin.

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