20090408/环球邮报:“华人巴菲特”声誉毁于公开演示

Meeting undid ‘Chinese Warren Buffett’

When Weizhen Tang could not show investors how he achieved reported results, they went to regulators

PAUL WALDIE

Globe and Mail Update

April 8, 2009 at 7:37 AM EDT

For years, Weizhen Tang was considered an investment guru in much of the Chinese community in North America. He called himself a “Chinese Warren Buffett” who could generate a 1-per-cent weekly return.

But Mr. Tang’s reputation was dealt a stunning setback during the week of Jan. 26, 2009, according to documents filed in court this week where he’s facing allegations of fraud. That was when he held a public demonstration of his investment strategy in his Toronto office and couldn’t match the reported results of his funds.

“Unfortunately the public demo failed,” Mr. Tang wrote in an e-mail to investors a few days after the event. “I apologize. I don’t want to find any excuses. I need more hard work.”

He added that there wasn’t enough cash to meet the redemption demands that had come in since the meeting and he told investors to wait six months.

Mr. Tang’s investors struck back. In the weeks to follow, they organized themselves into a committee, filed a lawsuit, launched their own investigation and went to regulators in Canada and the United States, court filings show.

The Ontario Securities Commission shut down Mr. Tang’s Canadian operation, Oversea Chinese Fund, on March 17 and started an investigation into allegations of fraud. This week the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filed fraud charges against Mr. Tang in Dallas, alleging his fund was a Ponzi scheme. The SEC also froze the assets in his U.S. fund, WinWin Capital Management.

Mr. Tang has acknowledged in e-mails to investors that he lost money investing, but he has insisted he didn’t take any money for himself. His lawyer has said Mr. Tang is co-operating with regulators. None of the allegations have been proved in court.

Documents filed in court detail Mr. Tang’s rise to prominence and show his many attempts to encourage investors to stick with him despite the allegations.

Mr. Tang, 50, came to Canada from China in the early 1990s, according to his website. He earned a graduate degree in biotechnology from the University of Waterloo and worked at various research facilities before turning to investing in 1995.

At first he handled investments for friends and relatives, the website said. In 2001, he created Oversea Chinese and expanded to the Dallas area in 2006 with the help of Jiehua Yu, a friend from the University of Waterloo, according to court filings. Ms. Yu had earned a graduate degree from Waterloo as well and worked with a Guelph, Ont.-based company before moving to the United States. According to court filings, she created WinWin Capital, co-owned by Mr. Tang.

By 2009, Oversea Chinese and WinWin had attracted more than 200 investors who invested roughly $75-million (U.S.) in total, according to court filings. The minimum investment was $150,000 (Canadian) in Oversea Chinese and $250,000 (U.S.) in WinWin. Mr. Tang did not charge a fee on the first 6 per cent of profit, but he took a 25-per-cent cut of any additional profit, according to court filings.

Mr. Tang concentrated on recent immigrants from China and he became a fixture in the community. He joined numerous organizations and donated money to various causes, including offering financial support for a group of pro-China demonstrators at a rally in Ottawa last year.

According to e-mails filed in court, he had great hopes of “raising massive funds” by tapping into China’s new entrepreneurial spirit. He planned to use his own investment skill and “widespread propaganda” to create a giant fund, according to one e-mail, which mentioned a figure of $700-million.

But after the failed demonstration, many investors turned on him. On Feb. 27, about 200 confronted him in Toronto.

In an e-mail sent a few days later, Mr. Tang called the meeting “shocking, sad and painful” and outlined a plan to recoup the losses. He said in a later e-mail that he had received $1-million from a friend, turned it into $2-million in 12 days and used it to repay investors.

“Please believe my trading ability,” he wrote. “Please give me time.” He acknowledged later to one investor that he had lost $15-million in 2006 and 2007, according to court filings.

Just days before the OSC’s move, WinWin sent investors an e-mail outlining a plan to stay in operation.

“It is inappropriate and unsafe to continue using the original Oversea Chinese Fund Trading account because the account can be frozen if government investigation is started,” said the e-mail dated March 14, 2009. “A new business entity, trust account and a new trading account should be formed in order to carry out this pay-back plan properly.”

Even after the OSC shut down Oversea Chinese, Mr. Tang continued to beg investors to stick with him. “Even if I have to go to jail,” he wrote in one e-mail, “I still hope that I can go after I have repaid all of you.”

Investors like Daniel Xu, a business professor at the University of Western Ontario, are hoping to get some of their money back. “I think I lost a lot of money,” Mr. Xu said in a recent interview. “It’s terrible.”

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20090408.wrtang0408/BNStory/Business/

1 Comment

  1. jackjia (Post author)

    经济学家徐滇庆在唐炜臻处损失惨重是真的

    加拿大新闻商业网4月8日讯/ 著名华裔经济学家、加拿大西安大略大学经济学教授徐滇庆是唐炜臻的客户间接得到证实,今天加拿大环球邮报刊登该报著名财经记者Paul Waldie关于唐炜臻的报道,称在西安大略大学任教的徐滇庆在唐炜臻处损失惨重,希望能够拿回一些本钱。

    不久前多伦多一些华文网站的论坛里有网友发帖,称徐滇庆教授是唐炜臻的白金客户,有人还半信半疑,“这么出名的经济教授,怎么可能相信唐炜臻呢?”,没想到事实真的如此。

    本网记者曾多次致电西安大略大学徐滇庆教授居所,其夫人多次表示,徐教授不在家,听到记者表明身份之后,便说不要采访了。

    徐滇庆看来与唐炜臻的关系比较密切,今年1月唐炜臻财富俱乐部举办北美财富论坛,徐滇庆教授也是就座于主席台上的嘉宾,并做主题演讲。

    徐滇庆教授简历:

    徐滇庆,1967年毕业于东北大学自动控制系,1981年获得华中科技大学经济管理硕士学位。

    1984年进入美国匹兹堡大学经济系,1990年获得博士学位。

    从1990~1994年任教于加拿大萨斯开澈温大学经济系,1994年至今,为加拿大西安大略大学休伦学院经济系终身教授和北京大学、东北大学、西安交通大学、华中理工大学和云南大学客座教授、沈阳市政府经济顾问。

    在1994~1995年期间,担任中国留美经济学会会长,1997~1998年期间担任中国留美经济学会副会长。

    著有《国际贸易税制与经济改革策略》、《政府与经济发展》、《政府在经济发展中的作用》等书,主编了《中国经济改革:分析反省前瞻》、《台湾经验和海峡两岸发展策略》、《中国国有企业改革》、《中国税制改革》等书,并在北美、欧洲和中国大陆、香港、台湾的经济学学术杂志和报刊上发表百余篇论文。

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