Chinese billionaire linked to Kushner reportedly held in inquiry

Wu Xiaohui reportedly detained by authorities on suspicion of financial irregularities

One of China's most famous billionaires Wu Xiaohui, who has links to Donald Trump's son-in-law Jared Kushner and is chairman of the insurer Anbang that owns New York City's Waldorf Astoria hotel, has reportedly been detained by authorities on suspicion of financial irregularities.

Anbang said in a statement that Mr Wu was "unable to perform his duties . . . for personal reasons".

The financial magazine Caijing reported that officials from the China Insurance Regulatory Commission (CIRC) informed a small group of employees of Anbang at a meeting on the company headquarters on Saturday that Mr Wu (50) had been detained.

Mr Wu’s last public appearance was on May 15th, when he attended a reception at the Belgian ambassador’s residence in Beijing. He founded the company in 2004 and built it into one of China’s biggest insurance companies, managing assets worth 1.65 trillion yuan (€216 billion) including the landmark New York hotel.

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Anbang has more than 30,000 employees and 35 million clients.

Spending spree

The company has bought numerous high-profile companies and stakeholdings in recent months, but there have been growing questions about how it is funding the purchases, including speculation in the media that it was using payments from policyholders to fund its spending spree, accusations the company denied.

Anbang denied rumours circulating for weeks that Mr Wu had been stopped from travelling abroad.

Mr Wu had recently been in talks with a real-estate company owned by Mr Kushner, who is Mr Trump's senior White House adviser as well as his daughter Ivanka's husband. Mr Wu and Mr Kushner were negotiating a deal to redevelop one of Kushner Companies' Manhattan buildings. Talks ended in March.

If true, Mr Wu’s detention marks another major step in President Xi Jinping’s anti-corruption campaign that is now taking aim at the financial services industry.

Earlier this year, Xiao Jianhua, a Canadian-Chinese financier with links to Mr Xi's family, was reportedly abducted from his luxury apartment at the Four Seasons in Hong Kong. One of China's richest men with wealth of about 40 billion yuan (€5.25 billion), Mr Xiao was taken to Beijing to assist investigators with a corruption inquiry, and has not been heard from since.

Xiang Junbo, the CIRC chairman, was sacked in April and put under investigation by the Communist Party's anti-corruption watchdog.

Anbang has been in a long-running feud with the news site Caixin and its owner Hu Shuli – who was the original founder of the magazine Caijing which published the news of Mr Wu's detention.

Caixin has described the insurer's shareholding structures being like a "maze" and accused it of irregular financial practices.

Clifford Coonan

Clifford Coonan

Clifford Coonan, an Irish Times contributor, spent 15 years reporting from Beijing