China court auctions 100 tonnes of live crocodiles, starting at US$550,000, no delivery
Enormous reptile sale sparks much amusement on social media after China’s ‘Crocodile God’ defaults, court liquidates ‘scary’ assets

A Chinese court will auction off 100 tonnes of live crocodiles for four million yuan (US$550,000) in a sale that requires buyers to pick the reptiles up in person.
The announcement of this unusual auction attracted widespread public attention for its sheer scale and logistical challenges, and also triggered much amusement online.
Recently, the Shenzhen Nanshan People’s Court captured public attention by auctioning off the unlikely animals online. The starting bid has been set at four million yuan.
Alibaba, which owns the South China Morning Post, hosted the auction on its Alibaba Judicial Auction Platform.
The reptiles were originally owned by the Guangdong Hongyi Crocodile Industry Company, which was founded in 2005 by Mo Junrong.

Mo was once dubbed “Crocodile God,” and had registered capital of more than 50 million yuan (US$7 million).