, Taiwanese billionaire Wood Chen linked to fake wine scandal

Taiwanese media outlet Business Today received a tip-off claiming that the country’s elites have been caught up in a series of fake wine transactions.

They allegedly spent more than NT$1bn (£23.6m) on high-end Burgundy at two merchants – Top 100 Wine and UMC. These wines are now suspected to be fake.

Huang Huihong, who runs Top 100 Wine, has reportedly agreed to accept returns and reimburse his clients. He allegedly revealed that the batch of suspect wines came from Wood Chen, the billionaire former chairman of electronics giant Yageo Corporation.

Wood Chen’s brother, entrepreneur Pierre Chen, is in the process of auctioning off a wine collection known as The Epicurean’s Atlas.

Sotheby’s expects to fetch a record $50m (£39.2m) by auctioning off the ‘mythical’ collection, and it shattered multiple world records earlier this month. There is nothing to suggest a connection between Wood Chen’s wines and those owned by his brother.

According to local reports in Taiwan, the country’s elites recently gathered at a party to enjoy wines from different vintages, plots and wineries in Burgundy. However, the wines looked and tasted almost identical, which aroused suspicion.

All of the wines pointed to Wood Chen, who is renowned for his love of fine wine and haute cuisine. Since 2019, the 67-year-old businessman has been selling off his wine collection to friends, either directly or via merchants such as UMC.

Reporters confronted him about the allegations, but he defended his cellar. ‘You cannot conclude that all the wines are fake from

This Article was originally published on Decanter

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