Sun Wei’s English name is translated as Wei Sun. And her last name, Sun, means "sun" in English. Today, this sun from the East is playing an increasingly important role in China's increasingly active financial services market.
Sun Wei’s current position is Morgan Stanley’s Managing Director and CEO of China. Morgan Stanley is actually a financial services company. What do financial services companies do? To take the simplest example, if a company needs to go public for financing, then the financial services company will formulate the most appropriate plan and help the company achieve this goal and obtain the most funds, and the service company will also earn a lot of money from it.
Since joining Morgan Stanley in 1998 and later working for other companies, this "financial beauty" has participated in or led the execution of a number of transactions that are crucial to promoting the corporatization of Chinese enterprises and economic and financial reforms. Large-scale projects also include many state-owned enterprises that involve complex restructuring procedures and are listed in New York, London or Hong Kong. Look at the clients she has served: China Life, Sinopec, Chalco, Sinotrans Containers and China Oilfield Services Co., Ltd....
Sun Wei was one of the first mainland Chinese students to study in the United States after the "Cultural Revolution" Member, graduated magna cum laude from a university in Massachusetts, and received a J.D. from Columbia University School of Law in 1989. She later became a lawyer in New York, focusing on U.S. securities transactions, including public listings and private placements of U.S. stocks and bonds.
In the early 1990s, Sun Wei Zhengrong first emerged, and she served as the Assistant Director of the Corporate Finance Department of the Hong Kong Securities and Futures Commission. While working at the China Securities Regulatory Commission, she helped formulate a series of laws and regulations, and also played an important role in welcoming the first batch of state-owned enterprises to be listed in Hong Kong in 1993.
After that, relying on her deep foundation in the industry, Sun Wei began to devote herself to the field of financial services, and she was out of control. The projects mentioned above are just the results of her more than ten years in investment banking. A small part of your career transcript.
As a woman who was born in China, studied in the United States, worked in New York, Hong Kong and other places, and has been successful in China's financial services market for a long time, Sun Wei has been considered by Wall Street as " A 'rare person' who is proficient in both Chinese and international game rules."
The "Wall Street Journal"'s comment when it selected Sun Wei into the top 50 was: shouldering the responsibility of safeguarding Morgan Stanley's long-term interests in China. In fact, looking further, that comment illustrates the extreme importance the world attaches to China, the largest market that is increasingly integrated into the global economy and plays an increasingly important role.
Sun Wei, who once left Morgan Stanley and worked for Credit Suisse and Citibank, has actual performance that makes any international investment bank impeccable. Projects she has participated in include Sinopec, Chalco, Sinotrans, CNOOC and China Life. Today, Sun Wei has become a "rare person" in the Wall Street investment banking community who is proficient in both Chinese and international game rules.