Legal
UBS Will "Vigorously" Fight Chinese Businessman's $500 Million Lawsuit

Reports said that Guo Wengui, now an exile living in New York, has sued the Swiss bank in London over a financial transaction. The bank said it will strongly contest the claim.
UBS yesterday told this
publication that it will vigorously contest a $500 million claim
from a Chinese businessman that he lost money after the Swiss
bank called in a margin loan.
A report from Bloomberg last Friday said that Guo Wengui
has “stepped up” his fight to claim the money. Guo, who has lived
in exile in New York for more than five years, sued UBS in
London, saying that the bank pressured him into agreeing to
borrow money tied to the purchase of shares in Chinese brokerage
Haitong Securities, the report said. Guo said that UBS forced the
sale of the stock amid a market rout and a 45 per cent plunge in
Haitong's Hong Kong-traded shares in 2015, wiping out his
investment.
“UBS strongly disagrees with the claim and will vigorously defend
itself,” a spokesperson for the bank told this news service when
asked about the matter. It added no further comment.
The Bloomberg article, reiterated in the Business
Times (of Singapore), said that this is not the first time
Guo has brought such a lawsuit, after failing to get the claim
heard in New York. He said he wasn't initially aware that UBS had
inserted margin call agreements into the contracts.
UBS advised the businessman to structure the deal through an
intermediary to avoid breaching thresholds that would require him
to disclose his holding, Guo said in a legal filing. He agreed
that the shares in Haitong would be first acquired by a Chinese
state-backed investment fund. But after dumping the stock, the
firm passed on the loss to Guo.
Guo has made claims against the Chinese government via social
media channels. The report said he is linked with Steve Bannon, a
former advisor to President Donald Trump.