Preface
We’ve performed forensic due diligence in China for over a decade. During this time we’ve
learned that China is a unique due diligence environment that’s unlike any we’ve encountered
in other parts of the world. What makes it unique is that Chinese businesses play by a different
set of rules. Checklists and procedures, previously used in performing due diligence on
companies in other parts of the world, simply aren’t effective in China. Culturally, socially, and
philosophically, Chinese businesses function differently from those in the West and in other
Asian nations. As a result, in order to pierce the great wall of corporate China, a new set of
procedures and methodologies was needed when performing forensic due diligence on
Chinese companies.
We use the term forensic due diligence for a reason. Forensic due diligence is due diligence
that goes deeper under the covers. It essentially believes that you’re guilty until proven
innocent, and that any numbers and facts presented during the due diligence process have
to be corroborated and verified to a higher standard before being accepted. Standard due
diligence, in contrast, uses a one size fits all rulebook which may vary little from country to
country. This approach doesn’t always work when evaluating Chinese companies. As a result,
serious deficiencies within these companies are often overlooked and business decisions are
therefore based on inaccurate information. Consequently, this has resulted in a belief that no
due diligence process could ever uncover all the deficiencies and fraud within a Chinese
company. We want to change that perception.
We’ve incorporated our established procedures and methodologies into Piercing the Great
Wall of Corporate China. In doing this we’ve taken into account the realities of how Chinese
companies function and operate, as well as interact with the Chinese government. We’ve
experienced firsthand the great wall of secrecy that Chinese companies try and place around
themselves. This has been largely effective at preventing those less experienced in performing
forensic due diligence from discovering the innermost workings within a Chinese company.
Few organizations and individuals, in our opinion, currently have an effective process that
allows them to accurately conduct comprehensive due diligence on a Chinese company. The
few that do perform their forensic due diligence and keep their discovery and evaluation
process proprietary to their organization.
In Piercing the Great Wall of Corporate China we’ll provide those who want to conduct
forensic due diligence on Chinese companies the benefit of our experience as partners
in one of the largest and most recognized forensic due diligence organizations in China.
We’ll provide you with the evaluation tools and associated information needed to successfully
analyze a Chinese company from a whole new perspective, enabling you to finally pierce the
great wall of corporate China.
Introduction
In 2009 a rash of fraudulent business practices by Chinese companies began to surface. Almost
every day one could open a newspaper and find new allegations of financial irregularities, or
the non-existence of significant corporate assets that previously appeared in the audited
financials of a US listed Chinese company. Soon no one believed that any public or private
Chinese company was honest, or that their financials could be trusted. Over the course of the
next two years 50 China-based companies were delisted from US securities exchanges. The
value of Chinese stocks plummeted, investors lost billions of dollars, and foreign financing for
Chinese companies soon dried up.
Performing forensic due diligence on Chinese companies for as long as we have, we both knew
that what the newspapers were now reporting had, in fact, been going on for a substantial
period of time. We’d performed forensic due diligence on scores of Chinese companies, and
managed to uncover these same types of issues over the years on a multitude of the
companies that we examined.
A question we’re frequently asked is why, if Chinese companies have all these problems with
the transparency of their financials and other books and records, and commit outright fraud by
claiming assets they never owned, don’t investors just bypass companies in China and invest their
funds in businesses within countries they do trust? The answer to that question is that not all
Chinese companies have inaccurate financials, and they don’t all commit fraud. The image of
Chinese companies has largely been painted by the press with a wide brush which seems to
envelop all Chinese companies, many of which have accurate financials and don’t commit fraud.
The task of those who want to conduct business with a Chinese company is distinguishing between the two.
As to the question of why someone should become involved in China, Jack Welch, former
Chairman and CEO of General Electric, summed that up best when he stated:
"If GE's strategy of investment in China is wrong, it represents a loss of a billion dollars, perhaps
a couple of billion dollars. If it is right, it is the future of this company for the next century."
China, as the world’s manufacturing hub, as a land of 1.3 billion consumers, and as a country
that’s shown double digit growth for three decades, is simply too important to the economic
future of most companies to ignore. Many companies and individual investors choose to
participate in this growth by acquiring, investing in, or forming a partnership with a Chinese
company. Therefore, forensic due diligence assumes a critically important role in providing
the information on which they can base their decision.
As we’ve previously mentioned, philosophically, culturally, and business-wise Chinese
companies seem to operate on a different plane than businesses in most other countries.
The primary reason for this is that China has historically been an isolationist country which
was cut off from interaction with the global business community for all but the last thirty-five
years. During this isolation Chinese society and businesses have developed their own morality,
ethics, cultural leanings, and business practices. Western cultures, in contrast, developed their
norms of business behavior, and an ethical and moral equilibrium in international dealings
with one another, over a period of centuries. As a result, and as previously mentioned, the
methodology of performing forensic due diligence in China can vary widely from that
performed in other countries.
What we provide in Piercing the Great Wall of Corporate China is the comprehensive
knowledge base necessary to successfully perform forensic due diligence on Chinese
companies. In addition, we’ve made an assumption that those taking advantage of our
knowledge in this area would already have basic accounting and business skills. They would
therefore supplement that existing knowledge base with our methodology and procedures.
If you want to perform due diligence in China, Piercing the Great Wall of Corporate China
will provide you with the tools necessary to delve deeper into the business and financial
fabric of a Chinese company and understand the obvious, and not so obvious, factors that
make performing accurate and comprehensive forensic due diligence on a Chinese company
so challenging.