The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

CEFC chairman investigat­ed for suspected economic crimes

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BEIJING: The chairman of China’s CEFC China Energy, the private firm that has agreed to buy a nearly US$9.1bil stake in Russian oil major Rosneft, has been investigat­ed for suspected economic crimes, a person with direct knowledge of the matter said.

Ye Jianming, who founded the company in 2002, was taken in for questionin­g this year, the person said without saying which authoritie­s were involved or whether the probe was continuing.

The person declined to be identified because of the sensitivit­y of the matter.

Shares and bonds related to CEFC China Energy plunged on the news, first reported yesterday by Chinese magazine Caixin.

Detail on the probe comes after the Chinese government last week took control of insurer Anbang Insurance Group Co Ltd and said its chairman was being prosecuted for economic crimes, underscori­ng Beijing’s willingnes­s to curtail big-spending conglomera­tes as it cracks down on financial risk.

It also comes ahead of an annual meeting of parliament, which opens on Monday, when President Xi Jinping is likely to cement his hold on power with a proposal to remove term limits for the office.

Given problems in China’s financial system, it was “distinctly possible” the government would assume control of more firms, said Professor Christophe­r Balding at the Peking University HSBC School of Business in Shenzhen.

“They are trying to essentiall­y ... build firewalls around each of these things so that people that are dealing with them say ‘OK the government stepped in, I’m going to get my money back’,” Balding said.

In just a few years, CEFC China Energy transforme­d from a niche fuel trader into a rapidly growing oil and finance conglomera­te, with assets across the world and an ambition to become one of China’s energy giants. It agreed in September to buy a 14.16% stake in Rosneft for US$9.1bil.

Aside from its energy assets stretching from Chad to the United Arab Emirates to Kazakhstan, it has also invested in a series of Czech companies. It has made investment­s there including real estate, a brewing group, a football stadium and an airline, with the apparent backing of Chinese and Czech political leaders.

CEFC China Energy did not respond to requests for comment on the probe into Ye.

The investigat­ion casts further doubt on the timing of the completion of the Rosneft deal.

A source with direct knowledge of the transactio­n told

Reuters earlier this week he expected the deal to close in the first half of this year, suggesting a delay from previous expectatio­ns.

CEFC China Energy executives had initially said the deal would close early this year.

A spokesman for Rosneft said the company did not know anything about the Chinese investigat­ion.

“It (the investigat­ion) is not related to us,” spokesman Mikhail Leontyev said.

CEFC China Energy’s debt and lack of transparen­cy over its ownership and financing have drawn scrutiny among internatio­nal bankers and some regulators.

Last month, the Czech National Bank rejected CEFC’s push to increase its stake in the country’s privately held J&T Finance Group (JTFG) because of a lack of informatio­n about the origin of the funding for the deal.

In an interview with Caixin last year, Ye said CEFC’s total outstandin­g loans amounted to over 60 billion yuan (US$9.5bil).

More than half of that was owed to China Developmen­t Bank, he said, which sources told Reuters is the company’s single largest source of financing.

The company planned to repay debts by selling assets, including those in the aviation and trading sectors, to focus on core assets in oil and gas production and the finance sector, Ye told the magazine.

Ye, born in 1977, set up the Shanghai-based company in his home town in Fujian province with big ambitions. In 2016, he said he wanted to create a second Sinopec, China’s second-largest energy giant and Asia’s top oil refiner.

The businessma­n ranked second – and two spots ahead of French President Emmanuel Macron – in Fortune magazine’s “40 Under 40” list of the world’s most influentia­l young people in 2016.

His influence goes well beyond China. Czech President Milos Zeman appointed him as an adviser on economic policies in 2015.

A spokesman for Zeman did not respond for request for comment yesterday.

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