ADVERTISEMENT

Hong Kong Freezes Assets Linked to Mysterious 8,500% Rally

Hong Kong Freezes Assets Linked to Mysterious 8,500% Stock Gain

(Bloomberg) -- Hong Kong’s securities regulator ordered brokerages to freeze client assets linked to suspected market manipulation in shares of China Ding Yi Feng Holdings Ltd., the obscure investment firm whose mysterious 8,500 percent rally over the past five years made it the best performer in MSCI Inc.’s global stock index.

The city’s Securities and Futures Commission has been investigating suspicious trading in DYF since mid-2018, it said in a statement on Wednesday, calling the company’s share price “irrationally high.” DYF was valued at around 95 times net assets, one of the most expensive levels worldwide, before the SFC suspended the stock and searched the company’s offices earlier this month.

The SFC, which didn’t name any owners of the frozen assets, said it’s not investigating the brokerages. As a group they hold about 38 percent of DYF’s issued shares, according to data compiled by Hong Kong’s stock exchange. Jonathan Li, a spokesman for the SFC, declined to comment further. A DYF representative said the company will cooperate with regulators.

The case adds to a long list of suspicious stock moves in Hong Kong that have threatened to dent the city’s reputation as one of the world’s premier financial hubs. It also puts a spotlight on MSCI’s decision to add DYF to its global benchmark indexes in November, a move that prompted emerging market index-tracker funds run by BlackRock Inc., Vanguard Group Inc. and Northern Trust Corp. to become some of DYF’s biggest shareholders.

Read more on DYF and Hong Kong stock swings:

Mysterious 8,500% Rally Attracts Big Funds and Big Questions
Hong Kong’s Rising Misconduct Worries Top Securities Regulator
An Unexplained 85% Fall Is Nothing New for Hong Kong Stocks

DYF, which operates similarly to a closed-end fund, had a market value of about $3.6 billion before trading in the stock was frozen. The company is led by Sui Guangyi, a Taoist scholar who has boasted investing skills on par with those of Warren Buffett and George Soros but who’s overseen lackluster results at DYF. The company lost money for seven of the past eight years.

--With assistance from Evelyn Yu.

To contact the reporter on this story: Benjamin Robertson in Hong Kong at brobertson29@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Sam Mamudi at smamudi@bloomberg.net, Michael Patterson

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.