Rely on Golden Unicorn analyst reports for stock trading—authoritative, professional, timely, and comprehensive, helping you uncover potential thematic opportunities! Forwarded from a roadside essay on HANXBIO-B . An unscrupulous "Big V" exploited my trust in him, causing my hard-earned savings of 1.85 million yuan to evaporate in just two days. What I initially believed was a golden opportunity has now been revealed as a coordinated slaughter of retail investors by this Big V and a dishonest company. Let me briefly recount the meticulously designed trap—this lesson cost me 1.85 million, and I hope it serves as a stark warning to all retail investors reading this. Through my painful and costly experience, I urge everyone: do not participate in any project associated with this fraudulent Big V, Gazelle Society's Kris.Z Yang Zekang.
Who is the scammer? Mr. Yang, whom I have known for many years. Given his status as a prominent figure in the pharmaceutical circle, I had placed considerable trust in him prior to this incident. After the incident occurred, he repeatedly changed his profile picture; everyone should note his WeChat ID: krisyang94.
Public account: Gazelle Society, boasting millions of followers. Revenue from the Knowledge Planet platform alone is estimated to reach 1 million yuan annually. He collaborates with multiple securities firms and listed companies. Unraveling the scheme: He leveraged trust, his Big V status, and information asymmetry to lure me into the deal, proposing a 50/50 profit split and promising a doubling of investment; he assured the lowest risk for the Big V, claiming he would "bring his brothers to feast." In reality, the market had already anticipated that this stock, HANXBIO-B (03378), was poised to fall. As an IPO intermediary, Yang could not have been unaware of this.
During the listing when the stock broke its issue price, it was down only 10% during the auction phase. At this point, he continuously dangled bait—claiming "there is price support," "they are watching themselves," and "an agreement will be reached"—to稳住 me, effectively covering for the "major players" as they offloaded their shares.
Once the major players had completed their sell-off and the stock had already plummeted 30%, he suddenly reported that negotiations had collapsed, there was no safety net, and left me to fend for myself.
During the post-mortem disputes, he invoked the principle of "investment gains and losses are your own responsibility"; he argued that a "price floor did exist," but it required "repurchasing the shares and holding them for six months."
Off-market information: He acquired shares at a discount.
Market chatter consistently claimed there was no market maker involved. Before the listing, he used sweet talk and deception to gain trust. Exploiting years of friendship and trust, along with his "Pharma Big V" identity and the promise of the stock "doubling upon listing," he tricked us into participating in this elaborately orchestrated scam. He promoted the stock across multiple platforms.
Author: Justcooool
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