Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

New risk factor for China stocks: Divorce

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Broken marriages are an unwelcome new risk factor for China investors.

Shares in Longfor Properties dropped 4 percent on Nov. 20 on news that its founding couple had divorced and split their controllin­g stake, sparking fears of a covenant breach. Family feuds are growing more common, and investors are taking a share of the strife.

Wu Yajun gave up 29 percent of developer Longfor’s shares to her exhusband, and lost her title as China’s richest woman.

For investors, the worry was that if he chose to sell down that stake, the couple together would own less than 50 percent of the company, which means a covenant breach could be triggered and accelerate­d loan payment may have to follow, according to Barclays.

Longfor is not the first Chinese company to be shaken by a marital rift. The ex-wife of Tudou founder Gary Wang got a Shanghai court to freeze his entire stake.

This case held up the internet video site’s New York initial public offering for half a year. Finally listed in 2011, its shares struggled, and the company was taken over by larger rival Youku a year later.

The founder of Shenzhen-listed public relations company Blue Focus barely clung to his own role as the top shareholde­r after giving almost half of his stake to his ex-wife in 2011. Divorces are costly for rich people everywhere in the world, but losing half a business empire is less common. What makes China different is a large number of companies still in founders’ hands, and the common presence of husband and wife teams.

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