Oman Daily Observer

China Anbang’s former chairman Wu contests all charges against him

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SHANGHAI/BEIJING: The former chairman of Anbang Insurance Group Co Ltd, Wu Xiaohui, contested all charges against him in a high-profile trial that began in Shanghai on Wednesday, adding he was unaware whether his activities had violated the law.

Wu’s trial for alleged economic crimes, including fundraisin­g fraud and embezzleme­nt, comes a month after the government seized control of the once-high flying insurer and announced that Wu was being prosecuted, as Beijing cracks down on bigspendin­g conglomera­tes and financial risk.

Anbang, the privately-held Chinese company that owns the Waldorf Astoria hotel in New York city and other marquee properties around the world, had been one of the most aggressive investors behind a wave of overseas acquisitio­ns by China’s firms that have attracted the attention of global regulators and investors.

The prosecutor­s found that in 2011 Wu concealed his actual control over Anbang and intentiona­lly faked financial statements to cheat China’s insurance regulator for approvals to sell insurance products to the public for investment, according to a statement from the Shanghai No 1 Intermedia­te People’s Court.

In July 2011, Wu broke the rules by telling his company to sell investment-purpose insurance products that exceeded the approved amount.

By January 5, 2017, Anbang had oversold 723.9 billion yuan ($115.32 billion) of insurance products and transferre­d some of the funds to his other companies for investment, debt repayment and personal spending. Wu swindled 65.2 billion yuan, the court statement said.

The downfall of Anbang, which got its start as an auto insurer, came after the government trained its sights on acquisitiv­e non-state firms amid a sweeping programme to lower debt and financial risk in the economy. The court said parliament­arians, journalist­s and others, including family members of Wu, attended the hearing.

Wu, known for his hard-driving, hands-on approach and single-minded ambition, was detained in June, sources have said.

After a spate of high-profile deals worth more than $30 billion, Anbang began to run into roadblocks even before Wu’s detention, though, failing to close on a handful of investment­s and facing criticism over its opaque shareholdi­ng structure.

On February 23, the government took control of Anbang Group for a period of a year. During the takeover, the company would be managed by officials from the China Insurance Regulatory Commission (CIRC), the central bank and other key financial regulators and government bodies.

It is unclear how Wu’s trial will affect Anbang or its ability to conduct business, but regulators have said they will undertake an equity restructur­ing of the insurer and protect the rights and interests of its consumers and stakeholde­rs.

Private conglomera­tes in China have recently attracted regulatory attention for their aggressive acquisitio­ns of overseas assets. Some insurers were punished for using client money derived from high-yield investment products sold to consumers for risky investment­s. This has particular­ly jarred with authoritie­s concerned about an economy overrelian­t on credit.

WU’S TRIAL FOR ALLEGED ECONOMIC CRIMES, INCLUDING FUNDRAISIN­G FRAUD AND EMBEZZLEME­NT, COMES A MONTH AFTER THE GOVERNMENT SEIZED CONTROL OF THE ONCEHIGH FLYING INSURER AND ANNOUNCED THAT WU WAS BEING PROSECUTED, AS BEIJING CRACKS DOWN ON BIG-SPENDING CONGLOMERA­TES AND FINANCIAL RISK.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Former chairman of Anbang Insurance Group Wu Xiaohui attends the China Developmen­t Forum in Beijing.
— Reuters Former chairman of Anbang Insurance Group Wu Xiaohui attends the China Developmen­t Forum in Beijing.

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