China's HNA Chairman Wang dies in France
after falling from a wall
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[July 05, 2018]
By Se Young Lee and Jean-Francois Rosnoblet
BEIJING/MARSEILLE, France (Reuters) -
Chinese conglomerate HNA Group Co-Chairman Wang Jian died during a
business trip in France on July 3 in what local police said appeared to
be an accidental fall from a wall while posing for a photograph.
Wang, 57, is regarded as the architect of an eye-popping $50 billion
acquisition spree that saw HNA accumulate assets ranging from a stake in
Deutsche Bank AG to high-profile overseas properties. Under pressure
from Beijing, HNA has since sold off many of those assets to slash debt.
He was in charge of HNA's strategy and ran day-to-day operations,
sources familiar with the matter have said, while his fellow chairman
and co-founder Chen Feng was often the public face of the group.
His death complicates the troubled conglomerate's efforts to restructure
and pay off borrowings, and could increase pressure on HNA to reveal
more about its oft-criticized opaque ownership.
Wang fell 15 meters off a wall in the village of Bonnieux, near Avignon,
a picturesque area popular with tourists, lieutenant-colonel Hubert
Meriaux of the Vaucluse gendarmerie force told Reuters.
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"He stood on the edge of a sharp drop to get his family to take a
picture of him and fell," he said.
Wang held a 15 percent stake in HNA. The group is controlled by a New
York-based foundation and a China-based charity that together hold 52
percent of HNA shares. Chen also holds a 15 percent stake.
Shareholders have promised that in the event of leaving the company or
dying they would pass their stakes to the New York charity fund,
according to a document seen by Reuters. It was not immediately clear
how binding those promises were.
An aviation-to-financial services conglomerate that counts Hainan
Airlines Co as its core asset, HNA's recent sales include holdings in
companies such as Hilton Worldwide Holdings Inc, Park Hotels & Resorts
and Spain's NH Hotels.
Wang's death couldn't have come at a worse time, said Brock Silvers,
founder and managing director of Kaiyuan Capital, a Shanghai-based
investment advisory firm.
"Deleveraging pressures on HNA continue to be enormous, and all such
plans will probably now be revisited as the management team
reconstitutes itself," he said.
Wang told employees earlier this year that the company's difficulties
were the result of a "major conspiracy" against the ruling Communist
Party and President Xi Jinping by foreign and domestic "reactionary
forces", according to an internally-distributed email.
However, the embattled group appeared to have won a reprieve of sorts
recently, when at a meeting held by China's central bank, lenders were
told to "support" HNA bonds, Bloomberg and the Financial Times reported
last month.
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Wang Jian, Co-Chairman of HNA Group attends a meeting marking the
20th anniversary of company's founding in Haikou, Hainan province,
China, April 28, 2013. REUTERS/Stringer
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CONGLOMERATE CLAMPDOWN
HNA has remained in selling mode: last month, Hainan Airlines said
it would offload its stake in Brazilian airline Azul SA, worth
around $324 million.
And this week, HNA canceled its A$280 million ($207 million)
debt-funded offer to buy the refrigerated trucking arm of
Australia's Automotive Holdings Group Ltd. The seller cited cashflow
problems at HNA as a factor.
China's clampdown on aggressive overseas deals has also seen the
likes of Dalian Wanda Group offloading billions of dollars worth of
assets last year, while Anbang Insurance Group was taken over by the
government this year.
Wang graduated from the Civil Aviation University of China with a
degree in airline management and held an MBA from the Maastricht
School of Management in the Netherlands.
"HNA Group extends deepest condolences to Mr. Wang's family and many
friends," HNA's board and management team said in a statement.
"Together, we mourn the loss of an exceptionally gifted leader and
role model, whose vision and values will continue to be a beacon for
all who had the good fortune to know him, as well as for the many
others whose lives he touched through his work and philanthropy."
Social media posts about Wang's death appeared to have been censored
on China's tightly controlled internet soon after the news was
announced by the group. "HNA Wang Jian died" briefly ranked 11th on
Twitter-like Weibo's hot topics page, but was quickly gone from the
top 50.
"It's really shocking news to us," said an employee who works in
finance at HNA, declining to give his name.
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"Everyone in the office is talking about it, but we don't know what
impact it will have on the company's direction."
($1 = 1.3539 Australian dollars)
(Reporting by Se Young Lee and Jean-Francois Rosnoblet; Additional
reporting by Elias Glenn, Pei Li, Min Zhang and Lusha Zhang in
Beijing, Emmanuel Jarry in Paris, Julie Zhu, Kane Wu and Sumeet
Chatterjee in Hong Kong and Adam Jourdan and Brenda Goh in Shanghai;
Writing by Tony Munroe; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)
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