SF Express founder Wang Wei became China’s 10th richest billionaire, but before that he was an illegal cross-border delivery man – here’s how he made his fortune
Chinese entrepreneur Wang Wei started SF Express in a humble shop in Kowloon, Hong Kong – now it boasts a cargo airline arm SF Airlines, over 80,000 employees, and locations across the globe – how did he do it?
Entrepreneur Wang Wei’s path to wealth was not an easy one. The SF Express founder and chairman ranked as China’s 10th richest billionaire in this year’s Forbes China Rich List, but before he made his fortune – a real-time net worth of US$30.1 billion, according to Forbes – he was making illegal cross-border deliveries from Hong Kong to China.
Wang’s father worked for the People’s Liberation Army as a Russian language interpreter and his mother was a university professor. Although Wang was born in Shanghai in 1971, his family soon moved to Hong Kong, where he grew up.
Wang started working right out of high school, taking a job at a small print shop in Shunde, a nearby town in Guangdong. When attempting to send printing samples to Hong Kong, he quickly realised that there were increasing shipping demands, but a significant dearth of delivery options.
While some would consider this an inconvenience, Wang saw it as opportunity. The timing was perfect, too, as China adopted a more open trade policy with the rest of the world in the 1980s – including Hong Kong.
So Wang borrowed around US$13,000 from his father, partnered up with five friends, and in 1993 Shunfeng (SF) Express was born. Its first base of operations was a modest shop in Mong Kok, in the heart of Hong Kong’s bustling Kowloon district.
At the time, however, private couriers were still illegal in China. People had to rely on the country’s overwhelmed national post office system, which was often deemed ineffective.
Hence Wang Wei’s origins as an illegal border-crossing delivery man.