A major
Chinese tech entrepreneur has defied regulators' orders to return home, writing
on Tuesday that his wife and brother would deal with the debt woes plaguing his
LeEco conglomerate.
Jia Yueting, the 44-year-old head of a tech empire that has
spanned electric cars and smartphones, posted a letter on social media to the
Beijing branch of the China Securities Regulatory Commission, which last week
ordered him to return to China before the end of 2017.
The one-time billionaire is believed to be in the US, attempting
to build up his Los Angeles-based electric car company Faraday Future. He was
added to a national blacklist of debt defaulters by Chinese courts last month
over hundreds of millions of dollars in unpaid loans.
"I have entrusted (wife) Ms Gan Wei and (brother) Mr Jia
Yuemin with full power to exercise my rights as the public company shareholder
and fulfil my shareholder responsibilities," Jia wrote in the letter
published on the Twitter-like Weibo platform.
He said Gan and Jia Yuemin would deal with the debt issues of
Leshi Internet, LeEco's main publicly traded arm.
Separately on her own Weibo account, Gan said she would be
meeting creditors to "resolve the debt problems".
The 33-year-old Gan, an actress and producer on several feature
films, said her husband owed 6.9 billion yuan ($1 billion) on loans connected
to pledged shares. He has paid 1.7 billion yuan ($267 million) in interest on
related loans since 2014, she wrote on Tuesday.
Leshi Internet's filings show that nearly all of Jia's shares
were pledged to back loans, though a Beijing court said last month that it had
seized more than one billion shares - Jia's entire holding - of Leshi Internet
to repay creditors.
The court also seized Jia's two homes in Beijing and $200,000
from a bank account.
"Jia Yueting has no other bank deposits available, no other
home registration records, and no vehicle registration records," the
Beijing First Intermediate Court said at the time.
Gan said in a New Year's Eve Weibo post she had "returned
to complete a mission". Her location was tagged as Beijing airport.
Leshi Internet had a market capitalisation of roughly $9.4
billion in April last year, but it has suspended trading in its shares since
then.
Investment firms have already marked down their holdings. If the
company were to delist completely, it could be one of the largest failures of a
Chinese publicly traded company - possibly wiping out the investments of its
185,000 shareholders.
Jia in his letter blamed LeEco's debt woes on one bank which
sued him after he was "only a mere two weeks overdue on a 30 million
interest payment".
Afterwards, in July, as creditors began to swarm, "the
production and operation of non-public companies came to an abrupt halt",
he wrote.
"Over 10,000 employees were forced to be dismissed, and the
only thing left for the company was to sell its assets to repay the debt."
Jia founded the troubled conglomerate in 2004 as an online video
streaming platform, but pushed the tech company into a variety of new business
lines - from gaming to sports and more recently, cars.
He brought in hundreds of small-time investors to fund the
rapidly growing list of projects, publicly announcing more than $3 billion in
funding for the far-flung projects, which now appears in jeopardy.
Jia's Los Angeles-based electric car company Faraday Future has
said it is in the process of raising $1 billion to start production of electric
cars.
The "US FF company (Faraday Future) financing has already
achieved major progress," Jia wrote.
"At present there is much work to be done for me to push it
forward."
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