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POLITICAL ECONOMY
Son of China's former premier quits investment bank
by Staff Writers
Shanghai (AFP) Oct 14, 2014


Chinese painter's son loses $300m inheritance case against mother
Beijing (AFP) Oct 14, 2014 - A Chinese painter's son who sued his 95-year-old mother over the estimated $300 million artistic treasure trove left by his father has lost the case, state-run media reported Tuesday.

The legal action brought by Xu Huayi is reminiscent of high-profile trust fund disputes in the West, and the family feud is a far cry from long-held Chinese ideals of filial piety.

His father Xu Linlu, a prominent painter of flowers, birds and fish, died in 2011.

He left a collection of 72 paintings by some of China's most renowned artists, including Qi Baishi and Xu Beihong, and three antique teapots.

The works are worth at least two billion yuan ($326 million), according to lawyers' estimates, Chinese media have reported.

His widow Wang Lingwen filed a will with a Beijing court in which he left her everything but Xu Huayi sued, claiming it was a forgery and demanding the estate be split up between the relatives.

The couple's five other living children, and the daughters of two who had died, divided on either side in the court case.

The Second Intermediate People's Court in Beijing ruled on Monday that the will was the true intention of the deceased and that the widow should retain ownership of the assets, the Beijing Morning Post said.

Internet users lamented the values revealed by the case.

"Family ties are nothing in the face of money," said a posting on China's Twitter-like Sina Weibo.

Another user slammed the younger Xu.

"Children who sue parents for money: you need courage to stay alive," he wrote.

The son of China's former premier Zhu Rongji has resigned as head of the country's top investment bank China International Capital Corp (CICC), the company said Tuesday, but gave no reason for his departure.

Levin Zhu, or Zhu Yunlai, stepped down as CICC's chief executive officer and chairman of the management committee, according to a statement.

It did not elaborate on why he had done so, but said the board approved his resignation after more than 16 years with the firm.

His father Zhu Rongji was China's Premier from 1998 to 2003, known for his tough style with other officials but credited with pushing deep economic reforms.

The elder Zhu helped orchestrate China's entry into the World Trade Organisation and hastened the shift away from state economic planning.

CICC was China's first Sino-foreign joint venture investment bank, set up in 1995 by China Construction Bank, US financial firm Morgan Stanley and other investors.

Morgan Stanley pulled out in 2010, selling its 34.3 percent stake to a group of investors which included the Government of Singapore Investment Corp. (GIC), according to CICC's 2013 annual report.

The Beijing-headquartered investment bank's net profit was 370.1 million yuan ($60.2 million) in 2013, up 20 percent from 2012.

It currently has 23 offices globally, according to its website.

CICC credited Levin Zhu with establishing a full-service bank with business segments including investment banking, sales and trading, and investment management.

The bank appointed its chief operating officer Lin Shoukang as acting chief executive, it said.

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