Chinese CEO stabbed 'over investment losses'

BEIJING • A Chinese investor stabbed the chief executive of a struggling Beijing-based asset management company after losing his investment, a company source said, highlighting growing public anger over loosely regulated financial products.

The stabbing exposes escalating tensions in China's financial system, with many investors feeling duped after losing their investments in wealth management products that had been marketed as risk-free with double-digit returns.

Mr Wang Jie, the CEO and general manager of Global Wealth Investment (Beijing), was stabbed in the shoulder last Sunday during a meeting with investors, the company representative said. He was rushed to hospital where he remained in a coma.

The assailant, in his 20s, was sitting next to Mr Wang during the meeting, the source said, requesting anonymity. After the stabbing, he calmly waited for police to arrive, she added.

"He was very young and didn't control his emotions well," the source said, adding that the assailant had invested 300,000 yuan (S$66,300) in Global Wealth's products.

The incident was first reported by Chinese financial magazine Caixin. Police declined to comment.

Global Wealth, which used to have nearly 200 employees, managed more than 700 million yuan in assets. Its clients took comfort from the fact that their investment was backed by Hebei Financing Investment Guarantee Group, one of China's biggest state-backed credit guarantors.

But Hebei Financing decided not to honour its commitment earlier this year. "Hebei Financing defaulted on us, and we defaulted on our clients," said the representative of Global Wealth. "We could not see any hope that Hebei Financing would compensate us ... and feel desperate."

The firm reduced its employees to around 15 after Hebei Financing halted operations. Last month, hundreds of investors in Beijing and Shanghai protested against Fanya Metal Exchange in south-west China, after they were unable to withdraw their money. The exchange itself said it was suffering from liquidity problems.

REUTERS

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on October 14, 2015, with the headline Chinese CEO stabbed 'over investment losses'. Subscribe