Banking

China Renaissance shares plunge after investment bank says chairman unreachable


SYDNEY, Feb 17 (Reuters) – China Renaissance Holdings Ltd (1911.HK) saw its shares plummet by as much as 50% on Friday after the boutique investment bank said it is unable to contact Chairman and Chief Executive Bao Fan.

Bao’s disappearance becomes the latest in a series of cases of high-profile Chinese executives going missing with little explanation – especially during a sweeping anti-corruption campaign spearheaded by President Xi Jinping.

In 2015 alone, at least five executives became unreachable without prior notice to their companies, including Fosun Group Chairman Guo Guangchang, who Fosun later said was assisting with investigations regarding a personal matter.

“The board is not aware of any information that indicates that Mr. Bao’s unavailability is or might be related to the business and or operations of the Group which is continuing normally,” the mainland China-based bank said in a late-Thursday filing.

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China Renaissance stock slid by 50% in early trade to hit a record low of HK$5, wiping off HK$2.8 billion in market value. It regained some ground to be off by 28%. So far on Friday, 19.04 million China Renaissance shares have changed hands, the highest on record.

A China Renaissance spokesman referred Reuters’ request for comment on Friday to the investment bank’s public filing.

Bao, a well-known dealmaker, is China Renaissance’s founder and controlling shareholder, having previously worked at Credit Suisse Group AG (CSGN.S) and Morgan Stanley (MS.N).

He has been described as one of China’s best-connected bankers and has worked on major technology mergers including the tie-up of ride-hailing champions Didi and Kuaidi, food delivery giants Meituan and Dianping and travel devices platforms Ctrip and Qunar.

Bao started China Renaissance in 2005 and listed it in Hong Kong in 2018 after raising $346 million. It has acted as adviser for some of China’s biggest tech initial public offerings (IPOs) including those of JD.Com Inc and Kuaishou Technology (1024.HK) as well as Didi’s New York listing in 2021.

China Renaissance is also an active investor in the tech sector. In 2019, it raised more than 6.5 billion yuan ($945 million) in a yuan-denominated fund.

Bao’s disappearance comes days after property developer Seazen Group Ltd (1030.HK) said it was unable to contact or reach its vice-chairman.

Alibaba Group Holding Ltd (9988.HK) founder Jack Ma’s long absence from public view after authorities called off the IPO of his Ant Group Co Ltd (688688.SS) led to speculation over his whereabouts. Alibaba has never reported Ma unreachable and media outlets have reported him travelling in Europe, Japan and Hong Kong.

Reporting by Scott Murdoch in Sydney and Kane Wu and Donny Kwok in Hong Kong; Editing by Christopher Cushing and Jacqueline Wong

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Scott Murdoch

Thomson Reuters

Scott Murdoch has been a journalist for more than two decades working for Thomson Reuters and News Corp in Australia. He has specialised in financial journalism for most of his career and covers equity and debt capital markets across Asia and Australian M&A. He is based in Sydney.



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