The Mail on Sunday

Fears growing as Chinese close in on UK ‘internet of things’ pioneer

- By Ben Harrington

POWERFUL activist investors have built up large stakes in UK-listed technology firm Telit Communicat­ions amid fears that a China-backed fund wants to take control.

Telit – an ‘internet of things’ company whose t echnology helps machines to communicat­e with each other – hit the headlines in 2017 after allegation­s that i ts former chief executive Oozi Cats was a fugitive called Uzi Katz on the run from the US authoritie­s.

Eddie Stobart haulier owner Dbay Advisors, based on the Isle of Man, has declared it now owns 11.57 per cent of Telit. Its directors include Colin Kingsnorth, who also runs family office Laxey Partners, the scourge of major companies including British Land which it tried to break up in 2003.

Richard Griffiths, the founder of City stockbroke­r Evolution, has also increased his stake in Telit to 6.07 per cent.

And earlier this year Hong Kongbased gaming tycoon Tang Hao declared a 3.4 per cent holding through his vehicle Discovery Key Investment­s.

Other large shareholde­rs in Telit – whose chief executive is Paolo Dal Pino, chairman of Serie A football league in Italy – include Davide Serra, the founder of the Algebris hedge fund, and Oozi Cats himself.

The manoeuvrin­g by powerful investors comes after secretive Chinese multi-millionair­e banker Yuxiang Yang joined Telit’s board earlier this summer.

His appointmen­t may raise concern in Westminste­r that a Chinese businessma­n with ties to his country’s Communist government could be seeking to gain influence over the business.

Yang runs China Fusion Capital, the parent company of Run Liang Tai Management, a mysterious investment fund that has built a 15 per cent stake in Telit to become its largest shareholde­r.

Sources said some of the firms that have invested in Run Liang are giant Chinese companies, such as coal mining group Wintime Energy and Jiangsu Shuanglian­g, a manufactur­er of air conditione­rs and boilers.

Run Liang also owns a stake in Sunsea Telecommun­ications, a Shenzhen-listed ‘internet of things’ provider t hat recently raised around $200 million (£1.5 million) by issuing shares to Zhjzgroup, a state-backed tourism firm. Yang also sits on the board of Sunsea.

Speculatio­n has been mounting that Run Liang is hoping to engineer a merger of some or all of Telit with China-based Sunsea.

Run Liang’s move on Telit, which is listed on AIM, follows a period in which several other London-listed businesses have been bought by China-linked firms.

Imaginatio­n Technologi­es was bought by Canyon Bridge – a private equity fund bankrolled by Beijing – in 2017 for £ 550 million. Concerns rose in the spring when Canyon Bridge tried to place four directors from China Reform Holdings on to Imaginatio­n’s board.

Conservati­ve MPs Tom Tugendhat, who now leads the China Research Group, and David Davis warned that Imaginatio­n’s intellectu­al property could be shifted to China.

When asked about Telit, Bob Seely, chairman of the Foreign Affairs Select Committee, said: ‘We do need a thorough review of investment security and we need an oversight board for purchases by high risk vendors or from higher risk states.’

Tel i t , which i s due t o unveil figures next week, declined t o comment.

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