China Seizes Control of Anbang; Acquisitive Chairman Faces Fraud Prosecution
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China Seizes Control of Anbang; Acquisitive Chairman Faces Fraud Prosecution
Chinaâs government will seize temporary control of Anbang Insurance Group Co. and prosecute founder Wu Xiaohui for alleged fraud, cementing the downfall of a politically connected dealmaker whose aggressive global expansion came to symbolize the financial overreach of Chinaâs debt-laden conglomerates.
The surprise move furthers President Xi Jinpingâs anti-corruption and de-leveraging campaigns while providing a government backstop for the high-yield investment products that Anbang sold to hordes of Chinese citizens. It also suggests that after months of clamping down on acquisitive tycoons, China is increasingly focused on insulating the economy from their shaky finances.
Itâs a remarkable turn for Anbang, which burst onto the global scene in 2014 with the purchase of New Yorkâs Waldorf Astoria hotel and only a year ago was in talks to invest in a company owned by the family of Jared Kushner, U.S. President Donald Trumpâs son-in-law and senior adviser. With 2 trillion yuan ($315 billion) of assets, Anbang represents Chinaâs largest-ever takeover of a privately owned company.
âThis is another step in China Inc.âs great unwinding,â Brock Silvers, managing director at Kaiyuan Capital, a Shanghai-based multi-asset advisory firm, said in an email.
âGiven the determination exhibited by Beijing, and the public example of Wu Xiaohuiâs cinematic implosion, Chinaâs âcrocodilesâ will surely redouble their efforts to address their balance sheets,â Silvers said, using a term for tycoons who engage in aggressive financial maneuvers.
Chinese authorities, who first detained Wu in June, announced the Anbang seizure just days before the ruling Communist Party was expected to meet behind closed doors to approve personnel appointments and government restructuring decisions. Xiâs efforts to clean up the nationâs gargantuan financial system have accelerated in recent months as he prepares to begin a second term as president at the National Peopleâs Congress in March.
Markets took news of the takeover in their stride, with the Shanghai Composite Index rising 0.6 percent on Friday. China Minsheng Banking Corp., one of Anbangâs biggest equity investments, advanced 2.8 percent in Shanghai as the governmentâs move eased concern about a potential firesale. Anbang, whose ownership structure has long been shrouded in secrecy, isnât publicly traded.
China disclosed the seizure in a statement on the insurance regulatorâs website Friday morning, while Shanghai prosecutors announced the charges against Wu. Here are some of the key details:
The countryâs main financial regulators will take control of Anbang for at least a year; the decision was made after illegal activities at the insurer endangered the companyâs solvency.
Wu will be removed as chairman and charged with fundraising fraud and embezzlement.
Anbangâs external liabilities wonât be affected and the insurerâs operations remain âstable.â
The takeover may end in a year if asset disposals are completed, strategic shareholders have injected capital and the company is stable. Government control can be extended by as much as another year if needed, but Anbang will ultimately remain a private company.
The government appointed a takeover team that will formulate detailed plans for changes in the companyâs shareholding structure, the sale of assets and liabilities, any potential division of the company, and whether other insurers will be appointed to manage parts of Anbangâs operations.
Anbang representatives didnât respond to calls seeking comment.
Under Wu, the insurer came to epitomize Chinaâs voracious appetite for overseas acquisitions, some of which came at prices that left observers scratching their heads.
Anbang acquired the Waldorf for $1.95 billion, the highest price for a single existing U.S. hotel. The insurer had discussed investing more than $400 million as part of a $4 billion transaction with Kushner Cos., a proposal that drew scrutiny from U.S. lawmakers citing ethics concerns. The talks ended in March 2017, with neither party offering an explanation for why.
While little is known about Wu, his links to the Chinese political elite became fodder for media scrutiny as his ambitions grew. He established ties with the family of reform leader Deng Xiaoping after marrying Dengâs granddaughter Zhuo Ran.
Anbangâs rise in recent years was remarkable even by the standards of Chinaâs booming insurance sector. And in many ways, the companyâs business model was among the industryâs riskiest.
Much of Anbangâs growth was tied to sales of short-term, high-yield products that the company used to fund purchases of long-term assets such as real estate â creating a duration mismatch that worried analysts and regulators. One of its products, called Anbang Longevity Sure Win No. 1, boosted its premiums almost 40-fold in 2014 by offering some of the juiciest yields in the industry.
Anbang has since been squeezed by Chinaâs twin clampdowns on overseas investment and financial risk, part of Xiâs effort to stem capital outflows and put the worldâs second-largest economy on a more sustainable long-term growth path. The Chinese leader has also helmed a broad anti-corruption campaign thatâs swept up everyone from business leaders to top party cadres.
This isnât the first time Chinese regulators have had to step in when an insurer ended up in trouble. In 2007, the government tapped an industry protection fund to take control of New China Life Insurance Co. by buying a major stake in the insurer, after its former chairman Guan Guoliang misused funds.
China also bailed out large state-owned banks in the 1990s at a cost of more than $500 billion, though the terms of that intervention were much different than those imposed on Anbang.
As for the insurerâs collection of businesses around the world, its new government overseers said they will consider âall or partialâ sales, without providing more details. Blackstone Group LP is already said to be looking at buying back some of the properties it sold to Anbang over the years, including the Waldorf.
âWith assistance from Alfred Liu and Emma Dong.
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