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Ping An Insurance
BusinessBanking & Finance

Wily Thai tycoon wins battle over Ping An stake

Regulator approves HSBC's US$7.4b sale of holding in insurer after lobbying by billionaire

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China approves HSBC sale of remaining US$7.4b Ping An stake. Photo: Reuters

The mainland regulator has approved the sale of HSBC's remaining US$7.4 billion stake in Ping An Insurance, which had appeared to be on the brink of collapse after weeks of raging speculation.

The sale to the Charoen Pokphan Group, controlled by Thailand's richest man, will be the biggest equity purchase in China by a foreign investor.

Last night CP Group said it "has made the payment for the full purchase price to HSBC". All parties involved - including the China Insurance Regulatory Commission (CIRC) - issued brief statements confirming the deal. None of them disclosed how CP Group had funded the transaction.

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Payment for the second US$7.4 billion tranche of HSBC's 15.6 per cent stake in China's second largest insurer was made in cash, HSBC and CP Group said.

The development is testimony to the political influence and resourcefulness of Thai tycoon Dhanin Chearavanont, known as Xie Guomin in China, who controls CP Group.

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The deal had been in doubt after media reports last month led to speculation about who the real buyer was and how the transaction would be funded. China Development Bank (CDB), which originally agreed to fund the transaction, subsequently pulled out of the deal.

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