Career
After graduation, Wang worked at the Guangzhou Railway Administration as a technician before he resigned.[3] In 1980, Wang tested into the Guangdong Provincial Commission of Foreign Economic Relations and Trade, where he worked on attracting foreign investment. He remained there for six years before moving to Shenzhen.
During the early 1980s, Wang accumulated his initial capital by working as an intermediary in the animal feed trade, including the resale of corn. Using these proceeds, he established the Shenzhen Modern Science and Education Instruments Exhibition Center, which engaged in the import and sale of electronic and office equipment from Japan, and later expanded into a range of manufacturing and trading activities.
In 1983, Wang joined the Shenzhen Special Economic Zone Development Corporation. In 1984, Wang established the Shenzhen Modern Science and Education Instruments Exhibition Center, the predecessor of China Vanke, and served as its general manager.[1] In 1988, the enterprise was renamed China Vanke and underwent a shareholding reform. That year, Vanke participated in a land auction in Shenzhen, marking its entry into the real estate sector. In early 1989, Vanke completed its shareholding reform and raised RMB 28 million in capital. On 29 January 1991, the company was listed on the Shenzhen Stock Exchange. Prior to the listing, Wang relinquished his 40% equity stake in the company.[1]
In 1994, Wang led Vanke through a corporate governance conflict over control of the company. Junan Securities, acting through affiliated shareholders holding approximately 10.7% of Vanke's shares, issued an open letter calling for a restructuring of the company and its management. In response, Wang led Vanke’s management to seek a temporary trading suspension on the Shenzhen Stock Exchange, during which he worked to consolidate shareholder and municipal support. Trading resumed within days, and following regulatory attention from the China Securities Regulatory Commission, the dispute was de-escalated, leaving Wang's control of the company intact.[4]
In 1999, Wang resigned as Vanke's general manager, and Yu Liang was appointed executive vice president and chief financial officer. From June 2011, Wang largely withdrew from the company's day-to-day management and pursued visiting study programs abroad throughout the 2010s, including at Harvard University, University of Cambridge, University of Oxford, and Hebrew University of Jerusalem, until the COVID-19 pandemic.[5][6] In 2017, Wang and Yu facilitated the entry of Shenzhen Metro Group as the controlling shareholder of Vanke. Yu subsequently succeeded Wang as chairman, while Wang became honorary chairman.
From 2024, amid a prolonged downturn in China's real estate market and mounting cash-flow pressures at Vanke, Wang relinquished his annual retirement compensation of RMB 10 million.[7]