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Wang Sicong, son of Chinese property billionaire, reaches deal with Shanghai Panda creditors

  • One of China’s leading investors in online entertainment, Wang Sicong settles after online media company went bankrupt in March
  • ‘Prometheus and its owner will continue to do business in an honest manner,’ equity firm statement says

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Wang Sicong and his Prometheus Capital investment company are settling with a group of Shanghai Panda Entertainment creditors. Photo: Handout
Phoebe Zhangin Shenzhen

Wang Sicong, the high-profile son of one of China’s richest men and the chairman of private equity company Prometheus Capital, has reached a settlement with more than 10 creditors of Shanghai Panda Entertainment, a company he founded in 2015 that went bankrupt in March.

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Wang and Prometheus Capital had compensated the investors, shouldering losses that amounted to nearly 2 billion yuan (US$285 million), Prometheus Capital said in a statement on its website on Thursday.

“In the past few years, Prometheus Capital has invested in dozens of projects and most of them are successful. The investment by the owner cannot be called a failure just because the start-up project of Panda Entertainment has failed. Prometheus and its owner will continue to do business in an honest manner,” the statement said.

Wang, the only son of Wang Jianlin, chairman of private conglomerate Dalian Wanda, has twice publicly been declared as a debtor by mainland courts.
Wang Sicong is one of China’s most high-profile second-generation rich. Photo: Instagram/@_Sicong
Wang Sicong is one of China’s most high-profile second-generation rich. Photo: Instagram/@_Sicong
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In October, Shanghai Jiading District People’s Court imposed limits on Wang Sicong’s luxury spending after he failed to comply with a court ruling last December to pay 3.6 million yuan to Cao Yue, an e-sports gaming host who used to work for Shanghai Panda Entertainment. Those restrictions were lifted by November 20.

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