Son of China Fire chairman gives up $30 million in stock

When China Fire and Security Group Inc. (Nasdaq: CFSG) went public through a reverse merger in October 2006, Chairman Gangjin Li's teen-aged son was listed as the beneficial owner of roughly 10 percent of its shares.

This week, a Securities and Exchange Commission filing reported that the son had relinquished his interest in that stock, which has a current market value of more than $30 million.

According to the filing, Gangjin Li now has sole voting power over the 2.67 million shares, giving him control of 57 percent of China Fire's common stock.  The filing offered no explanation for the transfer, the latest in a series of disclosures about the ownership of large blocks of shares issued when China Fire merged into a public shell called UniPro Financial Services Inc.

Michael Thieu, a China Fire spokesman, said Gangjin Li originally gave the shares to his son, Ang Li, to provide for his future. But the son is about to turn 18 and will no longer be a minor, and his parents are concerned about what might happen if he gains access to that wealth, Thieu said.

As a precaution, they decided to reverse the gift and use a different vehicle, such as a trust, he said.

"This transaction is internal to the Li family,'' he said. "It has no impact on the company's business operations or financials.''

Sharesleuth reported last year that the person listed as the beneficial owner of another 2.58 million China Fire shares was the sister-in-law of the company's chief executive officer, Brian Lin - a fact not disclosed in any of its SEC filings.

The sister-in-law, who operates natural food stores in Canada and California, was listed as the sole shareholder of a British Virgin Islands entity that sold millions of dollars worth of China Fire stock at the end of 2007.

After our story appeared , China Fire issued a press release and SEC filing clarifying the actual owners of the shares held by various British Virgin Islands entities. It said some of the people - including the sister-in-law -- who had been listed as beneficial owners were in fact nominees standing in for other people.

The new SEC filing says that Gangjin Li gifted the 2.67 million shares to his son in August 2006. It said that last Thursday, Ang Li's mother and legal guardian, Chunfeng Gao, " irrevocably disclaimed and renounced any and all legal and beneficial interest" in the shares on behalf of her son.

Ang Li is a student. He and his mother live in North Vancouver, British Columbia. When Sharesleuth asked him last year how he came to be listed as the owner of a big block of China Fire shares, he said he had seen the documents but was unaware of the details.

Although the reversal of the share gift puts more stock directly into Gangjin Li's hands, that could be seen as a positive for the company and for other investors, said Thieu, a former securities analyst.

"From my view, it actually will provide more stability,'' he said.

China Fire's stock closed Friday at $11.98 a share.

 

published July 9, 2009, 0 Comments

 

Leave a comment

short takes Subscribe to feed

Former head of Florida company becomes first person sentenced in insurance fraud case

Recently unsealed court filings show that the former chief executive of MDWerks Inc. had been cooperating with federal authorities since being charged with health care fraud in December 2008. READ MORE

Surge in Chinese coal company's shares produces quick gain for private placement investors

A tenfold increase in the stock of SinoCoking Coal and Coke Chemical Industries Inc. has generated tens of millions of dollars in gains -- on paper, at least -- for investors in a private placement last month. READ MORE

Money and property seized from Who's Your Daddy executives

The government disclosed the seizures as part of its ongoing drug trafficking case in San Diego that includes one of the company's founders and former executives READ MORE

Rockwell Medical Technologies has close ties to financier facing SEC charges

Rockwell Medical hired Michael J. Xirinachs as a business-development and investor-relations consultant just before a surge in its shares. A year later, the warrants he received as compensation are worth $1.9 million more than their exercise price. READ MORE

Is notorious brokerage boss Harold Gallison back in the penny stock game?

Paper trail points to Gallison's possible involvement with former associate Kyle Rowe in a San Diego company that helps small companies go public. Both men have been barred by the Securities and Exchange Commission and the National Association of Securities Dealers (now FINRA). READ MORE

Get email updates

Add your email address to our updates list.
*Email: First Name: Last Name:
* = Required Field