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Neither a borrower nor a lender be in China, especially when the collateral comes from outer space

Meteorite used as down payment by friend for large loan leaves lender in quandary over its worth and ownership

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The meteorite, found in southwest China, weighs about 700 grams. Chinese law is vague about who actually owns rocks from space. Photo: Lzep.cn

A man in southwest China who lent 110,000 yuan (HK$130,000) to friend three years ago was surprised to be repaid not with cash, but a meteorite, a regional newspaper reported.

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The man, surnamed Wang, said his friend wanted to use the space rock as security for the debt, but trying to establish its true worth – and original owner – has proved to a true a headache for Wang, the Chengdu Economic Daily reported.

Last month, Wang, who runs a catering business in Tibet, met his friend in Luzhou, in Sichuan province, where he laid eyes on the meteorite for the first time.

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The black and reddish stone, about 6cm wide and 4.5cm long, weights about 700 grams.

READ MORE: ‘Coal’ found in meteorite points to life on Mars, says Chinese-led research team

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