Richest woman becomes richer
(Xinhua) Updated: 2006-10-13 10:35
Zhang Yin, who became a household name Wednesday morning for topping a recent
list of China's richest people, is a billion yuan wealthier by the afternoon.
Reports of her massive wealth were printed in morning newspapers yesterday
and before markets closed that afternoon, share prices of Zhang's
Guangdong-based Nine Dragons Paper Industries Co., Ltd. jumped 2.77 percent,
adding an extra 1.1 billion yuan (139 million U.S. dollars) to her assets.
Ms Zhang Yin
[hurun.net]
| Zhang, the 49-year-old
founder and chairwoman of the paper company, was reported to be the mainland's
richest person with a fortune of 27 billion yuan (3.4 billion U.S. dollars).
"Zhang Yin's personal assets must have increased by 1.1 billion yuan,"
Thursday's Xinmin Evening News quoted a company official as saying.
Zhang is believed to be the wealthiest self-made woman in the world.
According to Rupert Hoogewerf, who set up the Huran Report in 1999 which lists
wealthy people in China. She is richer than the U.S. television host Oprah
Winfrey and author of the Harry Potter series JK Rowling.
However, her low profile has helped her remain largely unknown over the past
years.
Zhang made her first appearance on the list of richest people on the Huran
Report in 2003, ranking 17th with 2.5 billion yuan. In 2005 Forbes's China Rich
list, listed Zhang as 107th richest with 1.5 billion yuan, according to the
Xinmin Evening News.
The newspaper said Zhang's lawyer sent Rupert Hoogewerf a letter in 2003,
saying that she didn't want her name on the list.
Born in a soldier's family in northeast China's Heilongjiang Province, Zhang
was the eldest sister to seven children. She went to Hong Kong in 1985 and
started her career in waste paper trading with 30,000 yuan.
Zhang defied financial hardships, cheating business partners and intimidation
from local mafia to build up her wealth in the subsequent five years before
moving to the United States with her husband in February 1990 to pursue her
dream of becoming the "empress of waste paper".
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