Mammoth Chinese Conglomerate HNA Group Reveals New Details About Its Ownership
You’ve Never Heard of HNA Group. Here’s Why You Will. · Fortune

As questions mount over who exactly owns the Chinese conglomerates that are now heavily invested in the U.S. and Europe, the mammoth HNA Group has revealed that more than 82% of the company is concentrated in the hands of its two chairmen and HNA’s charity organization.

The company detailed its ownership structure on Monday amid growing scrutiny.

Privately-held HNA is among the fastest growing companies on Fortune‘s Global 500 list of the world’s largest corporations. The sprawling conglomerate has leaped from No. 464 in the rankings two years ago to No. 170 this year, with $53 billion in revenues in 2016. Factoring in new acquisitions, HNA is expected to generate about $100 billion in sales this year, which would easily place it among the biggest 100 companies on the planet.

HNA’s rocketing expansion has been fueled by billions in debt, much of it from China’s state-owned banks. The company has pushed aggressively into U.S. and European markets—taking large stakes in brand-name companies such as Hilton hotels and Deutsche Bank and snapping up other companies and properties outright. In January, HNA paid some $200 million to acquire a majority stake in SkyBridge Capital, the investment firm founded by high-profile Wall Street veteran Anthony Scaramucci, who on Friday was named White House Communications Director.

Top executives of HNA spoke to Fortune in recent weeks for a feature story in Aug. 1 issue of the magazine detailing the company’s rise and its executives’ ambition to grow it into one of the world’s 10 biggest companies.

Yet despite long interviews with HNA’s CEO Adam Tan and its billionaire co-founder and chairman Chen Feng, key questions over the group’s ownership structure remained unanswered at that time—even after repeated questions by Fortune over who owns what stakes in the company. Last week, HNA’s external public-relations agency relayed to Fortune that the company’s charity, Hainan Province Cihang Foundation, owned 22.75% of the group, while the remaining 77.25% of the shares were held by 18 individuals whose identities remained secret.

According to the figures released today, however, the foundation in fact owns 52.25% of HNA—with 22.75% held by the branch that’s registered in China, and 29.50% held by the international foundation, registered in New York. Aside from that, HNA’s two chairmen, Chen Fang and Wang Jian, each hold 14.98% of the company, while CEO Adam Tan holds a 2.95% stake, according to the company. Nine other directors hold a total of 14.63%. And the Hainan Airlines Holding Company owns 0.25%. (Ownership stakes are rounded to two decimal points.)