The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Chinese authoritie­s urge investors’ claims against shut P2P lender

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SHANGHAI: Chinese authoritie­s have urged investors to register their claims against a now shut peer-to-peer (P2P) lender allegedly behind the country’s biggest ever Ponzi scheme, according to a statement, raising hopes of compensati­on.

The Ministry of Public Security, or police, called on investors in the financial products of Ezubao – which allegedly bilked 900,000 peopleouto­f50billion­yuan(US$7.6 billion) – to provide their personal informatio­n through a newly establishe­d online platform.

The ministry would collect the informatio­n until May 13, using it to assist in the investigat­ion and as a “reference for return of funds”, according to the statement.

Police shut down the company in December and state media earlier this month paraded some of the 21 arrested executives involved with Ezubao and its parent firm Yucheng, saying their platform was a fraud.

The scandal has highlighte­d poor regulation in the world’s biggest P2P market but also how Chinese investors fail to recognise financial risk.

Claimants were invited to submit their informatio­n electronic­ally given the large number of investors spread over a wide geographic­al area and involving a massive amount of data, the statement said.

But some investors voiced scepticism about the government’s motives, with one saying she feared authoritie­s might use any informatio­n against her for participat­ing in what the police statement called “illegal fundraisin­g”.

“They called it illegal fundraisin­g and if I register, I’m the one who was doing that,” Wang Dehong, who lost 180,000 yuan, told AFP.

Police said the government would “protect the legal rights of investors”.

The collapse of the company has already sparked protests, which the government typically fears out of worries over social unrest.

China has nearly2,600 platforms described as P2P businesses, according to one industry estimate,withtransa­ctionsvalu­ed at around US$150 billion last year. — AFP

 ??  ?? The logo of P2P lender Ezubao is seen at its padlocked office in Hangzhou.The Ministry of Public Security, or police, called on investors in the financial products of Ezubao – which allegedly bilked 900,000 people out of 50 billion yuan (US$7.6 billion) – to provide their personal informatio­n through a newly establishe­d online platform. — AFP photo
The logo of P2P lender Ezubao is seen at its padlocked office in Hangzhou.The Ministry of Public Security, or police, called on investors in the financial products of Ezubao – which allegedly bilked 900,000 people out of 50 billion yuan (US$7.6 billion) – to provide their personal informatio­n through a newly establishe­d online platform. — AFP photo

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