China Development Financial Holding Corp (開發金控), the nation's fourth-largest financial company, yesterday named 33-year-old Diana Chen (陳敏薰) as temporary chairperson in the absence of chairman Liu Tai-ying (劉泰英).
On Monday, Liu, 66, was detained by the Taipei District Court on charges of corruption and embezzlement in the Zanadau Development (
Chen was hand-picked by Liu himself and approved at the company's board meeting yesterday, Shih Jer-shyong (
"Besides being a board member [since 1998], Chen has also been an investment adviser to the company," Shih said, adding that Liu has a very close relationship with Chen's father.
Satisfied with Liu's leadership, Shih said the company has no plans to select a new chairman to replace Liu. The company expects Liu to make an appeal to the court to clear his name.
"Chen's time as chairperson will end the moment chairman Liu is released," China Development's spokeswoman Grace Fang (
According to China Development, Chen heads the direct investment department at Lilontex Corp (
With an MBA from California's Claremont Graduate University, Chen is responsible for Lilontex's corporate-venture program in in the biotechnology and informataion-technology sectors. She also serves on board of directors for China Development Industrial Bank (
Despite the announcement, China Development shares traded 1.1 percent higher yesterday to close at NT$14.05.
After Liu's detention, some stock analysts expressed concern that the business tycoon's involvement in the scandal would cause short-term jitters among investors, but Chang Ya-hsiu (
"Investors had taken the incident into consideration before [when] Liu was previously taken in twice for questioning," Chang said.
Liu's detention came after two previous requests by prosecutors failed. Investigators released Liu on Nov. 28 after a day of questioning over alleged kickbacks received in exchange for providing financing for Zanadau property developments including an amusement-park project in 1998.
It appears that Liu will retain control of the company for the time being, Chang said. She warned, however, that China Development may face other challenges if internal issues are not addressed.
"Employees may worry that a new chairman will trigger a management reshuffle," Chang said.
According to Shih, China Development posted after-tax earnings of NT$6.4 billion last year and forecast a profit of NT$10 billion for this year.
NEW IDENTITY: Known for its software, India has expanded into hardware, with its semiconductor industry growing from US$38bn in 2023 to US$45bn to US$50bn India on Saturday inaugurated its first semiconductor assembly and test facility, a milestone in the government’s push to reduce dependence on foreign chipmakers and stake a claim in a sector dominated by China. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi opened US firm Micron Technology Inc’s semiconductor assembly, test and packaging unit in his home state of Gujarat, hailing the “dawn of a new era” for India’s technology ambitions. “When young Indians look back in the future, they will see this decade as the turning point in our tech future,” Modi told the event, which was broadcast on his YouTube channel. The plant would convert
‘SEISMIC SHIFT’: The researcher forecast there would be about 1.1 billion mobile shipments this year, down from 1.26 billion the prior year and erasing years of gains The global smartphone market is expected to contract 12.9 percent this year due to the unprecedented memorychip shortage, marking “a crisis like no other,” researcher International Data Corp (IDC) said. The new forecast, a dramatic revision down from earlier estimates, gives the latest accounting of the ongoing memory crunch that is affecting every corner of the electronics industry. The demand for advanced memory to power artificial intelligence (AI) tasks has drained global supply until well into next year and jeopardizes the business model of many smartphone makers. IDC forecast about 1.1 billion mobile shipments this year, down from 1.26 billion the prior
People stand in a Pokemon store in Tokyo on Thursday. One of the world highest-grossing franchises is celebrated its 30th anniversary yesterday.
Zimbabwe’s ban on raw lithium exports is forcing Chinese miners to rethink their strategy, speeding up plans to process the metal locally instead of shipping it to China’s vast rechargeable battery industry. The country is Africa’s largest lithium producer and has one of the world’s largest reserves, according to the US Geological Survey (USGS). Zimbabwe already banned the export of lithium ore in 2022 and last year announced it would halt exports of lithium concentrates from January next year. However, on Wednesday it imposed the ban with immediate effect, leaving unclear what the lithium mining sector would do in the