One of China's richest men, Guo Guangchang, is reported to be missing.
Financial magazine Caixin said that staff at Mr Guo's company, Fosun International, had been unable to contact their boss since Thursday afternoon.
Fosun, one of China's biggest private conglomerates, halted trading of its Hong Kong shares following the reports.
There is speculation that Mr Guo, described as China's Warren Buffett, has been detained by the police.
Caixin quoted social media messages saying he had last been seen with police in Shanghai.
A source close to the Fosun Group told the BBC that Mr Guo had not been contactable via an internal company-wide mobile app.
"It's very likely he's been asked by the Chinese authorities to co-operate in an investigation. He is not being investigated himself," the source said.
He declined to speculate about the details of the investigation.
Fosun said it would release further details later. Mr Guo was linked to a corruption court case in August.
BBC Asia-Pacific analyst Michael Bristow says Mr Guo's empire extends across the world, while the publisher Forbes estimates his fortune at $7bn (£4.6bn).
Fosun Group has interests spanning media, insurance, real estate and retail. Recently, it took control of French holiday group Club Med.
Image copyrightReutersImage captionIn February this year Fosun finally clinched control of the French holiday group Club Mediterranee
Fosun International, the parent company of Shanghai-based Fosun Group, was listed in Hong Kong in 2007.
In a statement to the Hong Kong stock exchange on Friday, the firm said its shares would be halted from trade "with effect from 9:00 on Friday, 11 December 2015 pending the release of an announcement containing inside information".
As part of the statement, Mr Guo's name was included in the list of Fosun's executive directors.
Karishma Vaswani, Asia Business correspondent, BBC News
If Mr Guo has indeed disappeared, he wouldn't be the first high-profile executive in China's financial sector to have gone missing in recent weeks.
There is speculation that this is part of the wider anti-corruption campaign that Beijing launched to clean up various pillars of China's economy - which now includes the financial sector.
If Mr Guo is proved to be part of that, then he would be among the most high-profile Chinese businessmen caught up in it.
He called himself a student of the US investment legend Warren Buffett and wanted to transform his conglomerate, Fosun, into a top asset management firm.
Fosun has made a number of international acquisitions recently and is a shareholder in global media companies such as Forbes. It is seen as one of China's most successful firms internationally.
Mystery behind China's 'missing' bosses
Fosun profile
Image copyrightGetty Images
Mr Guo launched Fosun with a group of fellow students in 1992.
Headquartered in Shanghai, Fosun's initial success came from pharmaceutical and real estate investments.
The firm's business interests and investments now include insurance, industrial operations, real estate and asset management, among others.
After nearly two years of takeover efforts, Fosun finally clinched control of the French holiday group Club Mediterranee in February.
Today, the conglomerate has a wide range of international investments including Greek fashion brand Folli Follie and the Chase Manhattan building in New York.
Last year, Mr Guo told the BBC of some of the difficulties the private enterprise had faced over the years doing business in China. He said when China's banks were all state-owned that it had been hard to secure long-term loans.
Fosun International posted a 24% rise in profit for the year ending in December 2014 from a year earlier to 6.86bn yuan ($1.1bn). Its shares fell close to 2% on the news, however, by mid-afternoon they had recovered lost ground to be down 0.45%.
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