Trump's move to blacklist Xiaomi cost Chinese firm's top executives $4.5 bn

The move startled investors because previous bans focused on Chinese companies with military ties

Lei Jun
Lei Jun, chief executive officer of Xiaomi Corp., gestures as he speaks during a product launch for the Redmi Note 7 smartphone in Beijing, China, on Thursday, Jan. 10, 2019 | Photo: Bloomberg
Venus Feng | Bloomberg
2 min read Last Updated : Jan 15 2021 | 2:39 PM IST
The Trump administration’s surprising blacklisting of Xiaomi Corp. is costing its top executives big bucks.
 
Lei Jun, the chief executive officer who co-founded the smartphone maker about a decade ago, lost almost $3 billion as the stock tumbled a record 10%, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. Lin Bin, the company’s vice chairman, is down $1.5 billion, and the fortune of at least five other billionaire shareholders has also dropped.

While China’s tech sector has been hit by the nation’s increased government scrutiny and other Trump blacklistings, Xiaomi was thriving. The Beijing-based company surpassed Apple Inc.’s smartphone sales in the third quarter and grabbed market share from Huawei Technologies Co., which got marred by U.S. sanctions. Xiaomi’s shares closed at a record high just last week, and in December the the firm’s market value surpassed $100 billion, finally reaching the goal it had for its 2018 listing.

But the latest attack by Trump’s administration in its final days quickly took it back below that level. The move startled investors because previous bans focused on Chinese companies with military ties and strategic value to the tech industry’s growth. Xiaomi said it’s not owned or controlled by the nation’s military.


Lei, who owns more than one-quarter of Xiaomi, is now worth $28.2 billion, down from $33.2 billion when the shares reached a peak last week, while Lin’s wealth stands at $10.1 billion. Lei started the year as China’s fourth-richest tech tycoon, just behind Jack Ma, whose fortune has lost about $10 billion since the end of October amid increased government scrutiny of his empire.

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Topics :Xiaomichinese companiesTrump administration

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