New Straits Times

‘Hedge fund brother No. 1’ guilty

- SHANGHAI

FORMER hedge fund manager Xu Xiang pleaded guilty to charges of market manipulati­on in one of the most high-profile cases to follow last year’s stock market collapse in China.

Xu, known as “hedge fund brother No. 1” for his winning bets in the stock market, was charged with colluding to manipulate share prices in an operation that began in 2009 and ran through last year, said a court in the eastern city of Qingdao on its official Weibo account.

Two other defendants — fund manager Wang Wei and Zhu Yong — also pleaded guilty, said the statement.

The court will announce sentences at a later date. Caixin previously reported that Zhu was a fund manager.

Xu controlled almost 100 trading accounts opened by his relatives, employees and employees’ relatives, said the court.

Between 2010 and last year, Xu — either alone or with Wang or Zhu — colluded with the chairmen or the “actual controllin­g shareholde­rs” of 13 listed companies to get informatio­n on topics such as dividends and earnings. The executives and owners had been charged separately, said the court.

Xu made trades to manipulate prices and trading volumes after buying low from executives through block trades or ahead of news announceme­nts or via private placements, said the court.

Xu’s Zexi Investment Management Co ran four of the country’s top 10 performing hedge funds between June and August last year, the period of the share market collapse, according to the independen­t ratings company Shenzhen Rongzhi Investment Consultant Co.

Zexi’s five funds returned an average 249 per cent in the first nine months of last year, when the Shanghai Composite Index fell six per cent, said Shenzhen Rongzhi.

Xu was detained by police in November last year on the highway between Shanghai and Ningbo, in an arrest that was captured in photograph­s and widely circulated on social media.

Police later froze over US$1 billion (RM4.43 billion) of shares in listed companies with connection­s to Xu’s investment­s, according to exchange filings by these firms.

His arrest was part of a wider probe into the causes of the crash, which wiped about US$5 trillion off the value of Chinese equities.

The government launched a support operation for local markets, suspended trading in many listed companies, and cracked down on shortselli­ng in an effort to reverse the market drop.

Before the crash, Xu had a reputation as one of the country’s top fund managers. One of Zexi’s five funds were ranked among the top three in China by returns in every year since the firm was founded in 2009, said the Economic Daily newspaper’s website. Bloomberg

HIGH-PROFILE: Xu colluded with chairmen, ‘controllin­g shareholde­rs’ of listed firms to manipulate prices

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