Beijing seeks to curb ‘shakedown’ detentions of Chinese executives

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China’s central government is trying to curb a spate of detentions by local authorities of business executives that is fuelling anxiety among entrepreneurs and risks undercutting efforts to boost economic growth.

A review of filings by the Financial Times found senior figures in more than 80 companies listed on the Shanghai and Shenzhen stock exchanges were detained in 2024.

China’s securities regulator requires listed that companies disclose detentions of controlling shareholders, chairs, chief executives and other top managers, and the numbers suggest much broader action against executives across the country.

Some of the detentions appeared to have little or no legal basis and in many cases were carried out by authorities based far from the target’s business operations, a practice Chinese media have dubbed “long-range fishing”. One leaked official document from the southern province of Guangdong said thousands of companies in a single city had been targets of action by authorities from other areas since 2023.

Premier Li Qiang this month called for stronger supervision of company-related law enforcement, saying the government would review regions with abnormal income growth from fines and confiscations or high levels of enforcement outside their jurisdiction.

“Instances of abuse of administrative discretion and unfair enforcement persist in certain areas and sectors,” Li said, according to the official news agency Xinhua. The premier added that it was essential to address “the pressing issues raised by citizens and businesses”.

Li Qiang attends a press conference in Beijing
Premier Li Qiang has called for stronger supervision of company-related law enforcement by local authorities © Shubing Wang/Reuters

Analysts said the high number of detentions might be linked to the deteriorating finances of local governments, which have suffered plummeting revenues from land sales amid a nationwide property crisis that has also slowed China’s economic growth.

“My friends are getting squeezed from all sides,” said one top Chinese investor, who claimed some local governments were reviewing residents’ assets in order to target the wealthiest with fines.

The investor, who declined to be named and was himself forced to pay off a local authority about a decade ago in order to win release from detention, said some areas had turned to “long-range fishing”.

“I accuse you of violations in my region and come and take you and make you pay,” he said, characterising local authorities’ attitudes. “It’s like a nationwide shakedown.”

About half of the 82 listed company-related detentions in 2024 reviewed by the FT involved authorities from another region or an unspecified location.

Eugene Weng, a lawyer at Shanghai-based Wintell & Co, said some of his clients had experienced abusive law enforcement by authorities from other areas, adding that such practices were eroding confidence in the business environment.

“The sense of anxiety has gone beyond imagination,” said Weng. “Entrepreneurs are thinking only about the short term, taking profits as soon as they can instead of investing in their businesses and transferring funds overseas as soon as possible.

“This actually worsens tax revenues and employment,” he added, “causing local finances to fall into a vicious cycle.”

The internal report prepared for Guangdong provincial leaders in April, which was later leaked online, said cross-jurisdictional enforcement had ensnared a growing number of local companies.

The report said that since 2023, almost “10,000 enterprises in the city of Guangzhou had faced law enforcement from other areas, with the vast majority of cases involving private enterprises and a rather clear profit-seeking motive”.

A Beijing-based entrepreneur said the detentions had created a climate of fear among founders. “It gets scary when you start to know people who’ve been detained,” he said. “The government needs to do something.”

China’s opaque enforcement system compounds these concerns. Companies said they and the families of detained executives received little information about their cases.

The board of “smart city” solutions provider Zhejiang Whyis Technology struggled to respond to a demand from securities regulators in March for more information on the detention of chief executive Ye Jianbiao.

In a filing, the board said that other than a notice from another city’s anti-corruption bureau that Ye was “under investigation for work-related crimes”, neither it nor Ye’s family had “received other formal notifications or documents”, nor were they “aware of the progress or conclusions of the investigation”.

Nine months later, the 51-year-old executive remains under detention. Ye could not be reached for comment. A company representative said they had no further information to provide on Ye’s case and that they would make an announcement as soon as he was released.

Some provinces have begun publicising efforts to protect private companies. Prosecutors in eastern Zhejiang last month revealed that local police had helped foil the abduction of an entrepreneur surnamed Shen by officers from another area.

After being abducted from his home, Shen fled from the police while being taken out of the province. Zhejiang police then arrested the two out-of-town officers, who initially claimed they were acting on their superiors’ orders and were eventually imprisoned.

In some cases, the detained executives ended up in the hands of authorities in areas where they did not appear to have any business.

Zhang Jian, 55, has spent more than two decades growing Aima Technology Group into one of China’s largest electric scooter makers. His family’s 73 per cent stake in the group is worth about Rmb19.5bn ($2.67bn), putting them at number 247 on the China “rich list” compiled by research group Hurun.

But in October, Aima announced that Zhang had been detained by an anti-corruption squad from Chengde, a city hundreds of kilometres from his home and the company’s headquarters in Tianjin. Aima does not hold any assets in Chengde, according to public filings.

“They say it’s about his personal issues but won’t tell us more,” said an Aima manager who asked not to be named.

The manager said Aima had been able to send Zhang important company documents to sign from detention and that they hoped he would be released soon.

“A lot of the detained chairmen get out in two or three months,” said the manager. “I can’t say how long ours will be in there, but this is the situation in the market.”

Data visualisation by Haohsiang Ko

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