Chinese police arrested 21 employees at China’s largest online
finance business on suspicion of fleecing 900,000 investors for $7.6
billion, in what could be the biggest financial fraud in Chinese
history.
State media outlets reported the arrests late Sunday and
state broadcaster CCTV aired purported confessions from two former
employees at Ezubao, an Anhui Province outfit that rose from obscurity
to become China’s largest online financing platform in the span of about
18 months.
Ezubao was the most spectacular player in a booming
online investment industry that Chinese authorities have been struggling
to regulate. Firms ranging from established Internet companies such as
Alibaba to virtually unknown upstarts have flooded into the business,
promising higher returns than those at state-run banks.
Ezubao
promised investors that borrowers on its platform would pay back loans
at interest rates between 9 percent and 14.6 percent, but 95 percent of
those borrowers were fictional entities created by Ezubao, a former
company executive told investigators.
The company advertised
heavily online and bought expensive ad spots that aired just before the
widely viewed nightly newscast on CCTV, the state broadcaster, former
investors told The Associated Press.
Police shut down the operation in December, prompting scores of protesters to gather in Beijing to demand their money back.
By: Associated Press (Beijing).
Review: Emerging Market Formulations & Research Unit, Flagship Records.
For The #FacebookTeam