Future Land’s shares make their biggest one-day plunge since 2012 Hong Kong IPO, wiping out US$1.9 billion after founder’s arrest
- Wang Zhenhua, the founder of Future Land, was arrested in Shanghai, according to Chinese media, citing the city’s police
- Shares of his Hong Kong-listed company plunged 23.9 per cent while his Shanghai-listed stock rose as trading ended before news of his arrest broke
The stock plummeted by 23.9 per cent in the last hour of trading in Hong Kong to a five-week low of HK$8.04, wiping out HK$14.86 billion (US$1.9 billion) in market value. Shares of Seazen Holdings, also founded and chaired by Wang, rose 3.8 per cent in Shanghai trading to 42.69 yuan when transactions for the day ended before news broke about the founder’s arrest.
Shares of Xinchengyue Holdings, which provides property management services in Shanghai, lost 23.6 per cent to HK$5.79 in the Hong Kong market.
Wang, 57, was detained on Monday on a charge of molesting a nine-year-old girl in a Shanghai hotel, according to Chinese media reports. A company official in Shanghai, who declined to be identified, said Seazen was conducting an internal investigation, declining to elaborate when contacted by the Post. Wang could not be reached, and the Shanghai Public Security Bureau declined to comment.
Wang began his business career working in a textile mill during the early 1980s, before branching into real estate in 1993 in his hometown of Changzhou in Jiangsu province. He listed Future Land in Hong Kong in 2012, followed by an initial offering of Seazen on the Shanghai bourse in 2016.