Caixin
Jun 09, 2020 04:52 AM
FINANCE

David Webb, Vocal Activist HK Investor, Discloses He Has Cancer

David Webb
David Webb

(Bloomberg) — David Webb, Hong Kong’s most vocal activist investor whose investigations into corporate malfeasance triggered regulatory probes and made him a minor celebrity in the city, said he has prostate cancer.

Scans revealed tumors along the length of his spine after he saw a doctor about pains in his arm, Webb wrote in a blog post on Webb-site.com, his eponymous website where he has blasted stock exchange and regulatory officials over the years on various market failings.

“Like every battle I’ve fought for corporate and economic governance in HK, I will fight this with full vigor, and hope to beat it for several years as new treatments emerge, staying at least one step ahead,” he wrote on the blog. “I still have a lot to live for, including a beloved, supportive wife and our two wonderful children whom I hope to see graduate and start their adult lives.”

When reached by phone, Webb, 54, confirmed the content of the post and declined to comment further.

Arriving in Hong Kong in 1991 from London with Barclays Plc, Webb began to trade his own money, and later morphed into a full-time investor. He focused on the city’s small and mid-sized companies where there was little analyst coverage. A Bloomberg News profile in January 2019 calculated he had amassed a fortune of at least $170 million.

“Think of me as an expert mechanic, walking around a second-hand car lot in which there are no warranties, and all of them are discounted for the risk of being lemons,” Webb said in a 2018 speech at the University of Hong Kong. By avoiding most of the lemons most of the time “and getting a substantial discount on good companies, I have been able to outperform.”

His attempts to clean up Hong Kong’s stock market trace back to 1998, when he decided to quit life as an employee at the age of 33 to manage his own money. Most of his reform efforts since then have revolved around Webb-site.com, a forum for his views on regulation, corporate developments, and other market news.

Enigma Network

Among his posts were regular stocks-to-avoid warnings that often triggered sharp drops in share prices as the market digested his analysis.

“I am looking for good companies, but when you do that, you find an awful lot of rubbish,” he said. “Things like the Enigma Network pop out.”

That’s the name Webb coined for the group of 50 Hong Kong companies he told investors “not to own” in May 2017. Six weeks after he alleged that the stocks were entwined in a complex web of cross-shareholdings that had pushed their valuations to unsustainable levels, 38 of them plunged suddenly, some by more than 90%.

In 2018, Webb published another diagram describing a complex network of shareholding and lending links among 26 Chinese companies and financial institutions, revealing a massive web of financial dealings surrounding China Huarong Asset Management Co. Ltd., the embattled state bad-asset manager.

 Read more
Caixin’s coverage on Huarong’s complex web of financial dealings

By his own tally, he has sent more than 1,000 letters to Hong Kong Exchanges & Clearing Ltd. and the Securities and Futures Commission on topics ranging from company disclosure lapses to trading rules.

One of his erstwhile targets, Checkley Sin Kwok-lam, the former chairman of First Credit Finance Group Ltd., one of company’s Webb placed in the Enigma Network, said he wishes Webb a “speedy recovery.”

“I respect Webb’s research work a lot,” Sin said. “Even for what he wrote about my company to be noninvestable, I don’t blame him nor get angry. It was because he didn’t understand my company enough. But that was in the past.”


loadingImg
You've accessed an article available only to subscribers
VIEW OPTIONS
Share this article
Open WeChat and scan the QR code