Mainland Chinese miner Zijin’s founder who built US$100 billion firm retires
Chairman Chen Jinghe, 68, will become honorary chairman and senior consultant; he says it is the best time to transition to a new leadership

Zijin Mining Group’s founder Chen Jinghe will step down as chairman after steering the company to the upper echelon of global metals miners following a decades-long run of growth.
The 68-year-old will become honorary chairman and senior consultant for the company after deciding to not accept nomination as a candidate for the board due to age and family reasons, according to an exchange filing on Saturday. The Fujian-based group did not name a successor.
Zijin’s market value ballooned to more than US$100 billion this year for the first time, underpinned by surging prices for its key commodities, especially copper and gold.
The company started with a small gold mine in China in the 1980s, and its value is now only surpassed by Rio Tinto Group and BHP Group.
Zijin’s competitiveness is “systematic and structural” and the company’s “successful growth story will continue”, Citigroup analysts including Jack Shang said in a note. The bank maintained the miner as a top pick, saying that its copper and lithium assets were undervalued.
A company with enduring success should transition from being “founder-driven” to “institution-driven”, and the management team was mature, making it the best time to transition to a new leadership, Chen said in the statement.