A Chinese company’s accounting lies cost U.S. investors billions. Recovering losses may be hopeless.
The Luckin Coffee scandal carries the flavor of a familiar all-American scam: a high-flying Nasdaq stock with a technology hook collapses after accounting fraud is exposed. But Luckin is a Chinese company — and that highlights a unique set of risks too often ignored by U.S. investors.
These risks will make it very hard for the out-of-luck investors to recover significant sums from Luckin, which had been taking on Starbucks in China. Luckin’s shares plunged more than 90 percent after
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Bob Fu's relationship with China has gone through phases. First, he thought money would solve his problems there; then he joined protesters at Tiananmen Square, thinking the politics could change. In the end, he determined, only God could save China, and he's been fighting for religious freedom in China ever since he resettled in Texas. With his nonprofit, ChinaAid, prospering like never before, he says the U.S. is finally catching on.
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