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May 03, 2016

Baidu’s US-traded shares drop nearly 8 per cent after China launches probe over student’s death

MINNIE.CHAN@SCMP.COM

UPDATED : Tuesday, 03 May, 2016, 11:10am

The Baidu logo outside its headquarters in Beijing. Photo: AFP

Shares of Baidu, the US-traded Chinese internet giant, slumped almost 8 per cent on the Nasdaq as China’s internet watchdog started investigating the company’s search system.

The New York-listed Baidu stock dropped 7.92 per cent to US$178.91 on heavy trading volume, wiping out US$5.3 billion value from its book – after news broke on Monday that its CEO Robin Li would be summoned by the Chinese authorities over the death of a student.

The investigation came after a public outcry over the death of 21-year-old university student Wei Zexi, a cancer patient who sought treatment in a hospital whose treatment programme had appeared on top of the Baidu search engine’s results.

Baidu charges advertisers for ranking them high in its online searches.

Wei, who had sarcoma, a rare cancer in soft tissues, opted for a form of immunotherapy – an experimental treatment that resulted in him losing critical time for cure. He died last month.

http://m.scmp.com/news/china/policies-politics/article/1940598/baidus-us-traded-shares-drop-nearly-8-cent-after-china