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Son relaxes, daughter-in-law takes over! Is this generation's family business starting to favor "passing down to daughters instead of sons"?
Text | Author: Yueyue, Gossip Girl of Finance
· · ·
Let me ask everyone a question:
Some say passing the torch to the son, others say the son-in-law takes over, and some mention internal family conflicts. But recently, Sister Ba has noticed that the trend of daughters-in-law taking charge is gaining popularity in the capital markets.
For example, last year, a 95-year-old daughter-in-law from Jiangsu took over the family latex manufacturing business’s mess, but she broke out of the low-price price war cycle, using price hikes and reputation to turn the tide; there’s also a leading Baijiu company in Anhui worth 30 billion, where the son stepped back early, and the daughter-in-law directly became Vice Chairman…
They are no longer just “luxury vase” figures in traditional narratives or supporting characters in internal conflict plots, but have become key executives, shareholders, directors, and successors with real power.
So why let the daughter-in-law take the lead? Some say the son is truly incapable—bad at everything, the first to slack off; others say it was an unexpected crisis—family pillar collapses, and the daughter-in-law had to step up with a tough attitude… A netizen joked:
1./ 95-year-old daughter-in-law takes over family mess, the first move is to raise prices/
Right after the 618 shopping festival last year, a major OEM factory in China’s latex bedding industry—Jin Xiangshu—appointed daughter-in-law Ma Guanqi to succeed, responsible for the family’s e-commerce business.
Don’t underestimate this company; it’s a brand under Jiangsu Jinshiyuan Latex Products Co., Ltd., with four factories in China and Thailand. Its peak annual revenue exceeded 1 billion yuan, making it an invisible champion in China’s latex bedding industry. Jinshiyuan once listed on the New Third Board and started IPO counseling on the Growth Enterprise Market in 2023, but there’s been no progress yet.
Ma Guanqi is a post-95s, with a master’s in business data analysis from the U.S. She has always been a bystander in her in-laws’ family business, but over time, she noticed the company was declining year after year.
How bad is it? Let’s feel the mess she inherited:
In short, she wasn’t there to “gain experience,” but to “put out fires.”
In her first week of taking over, she reviewed the financial model from scratch and was stunned. “The gross profit margin across the entire store was as thin as paper; the main product line appeared to be increasing volume, but in reality, each order was losing money.”
Even more outrageous, after nearly 20 years, the finance and production departments didn’t even know when to stock up for e-commerce—completely relying on “experience and intuition.”
Faced with this dilemma, Ma Guanqi made a decision considered “self-destructive” internally: to raise prices across the board despite the risk of losing market share. The team was stunned: “Prices are already too low to sell, and you want to raise them?”
Her logic was simple: the entire industry was engaged in suicidal price cuts, using worse materials, damaging reputation, and heading for collective death. Instead of following the trend and dying together, it’s better to stop the bleeding proactively. She openly said:
The pain of price hikes was inevitable—customers left, competitors laughed, and market share shrank rapidly.
But her business approach was clear: first, reshape the price range, then do natural latex science education on Xiaohongshu, focusing on the “student thin mattress” scenario, a core demand, and finally coordinate production with the front-end strategy.
Sales data proved her right. By Q3 2025, Jin Xiangshu ranked third on Tmall and first on JD.com. Overall sales increased by 40%. The student thin mattress, priced at over 600 yuan—twice as expensive as competitors—doubled in sales. Before Double 11, gross profit returned to a reasonable level, and the main product line turned profitable.
During the toughest times, one phrase kept her going:
Ma Guanqi, a post-95 daughter-in-law who was entrusted with the task, used her professional data analysis and branding mindset to pull a traditional enterprise out of the price war quagmire and breathe new life into it.
2./ Anhui Baijiu leader worth 30 billion, son not capable, daughter-in-law takes over/
If Ma Guanqi is the “firefighter,” then Zhang Dandan is the textbook case of a “princeling daughter-in-law” turning official.
Zhang Dandan’s father-in-law, Ni Yongpei, 73, is the founder of Anhui’s leading Baijiu—Yingjia Gongjiu, a private Baijiu listed company known as the “second in line among Anhui liquor brands,” with a market value around 30 billion.
The old man’s entrepreneurial journey was tough. In 1997, he restructured a small local distillery, pouring heavy investments to seize market share by directly acquiring hotels and supermarkets.
After establishing a foothold in Anhui, in 2014, Yingjia Gongjiu launched mid-to-high-end Baijiu priced between 600-800 yuan, and succeeded.
In 2015, Yingjia Gongjiu was listed on the Shanghai Stock Exchange’s main board, making the old man the oldest private Baijiu company’s actual controller. But as he aged, the question of succession arose.
Ni Lao only has one son, Ni Qingshen, who studied in New Zealand and returned to work in various roles within the group, even serving as a director in 2012.
Strangely, in 2017, during a board reshuffle, he suddenly left the core management team without warning and did not continue as a director. Since then, he disappeared from the management roster, only holding shares.
With the son stepping back, who would succeed? Media speculated that the old man planned to groom his daughter-in-law as the successor, given her resume matching the “princeling” template:
Although the son was out, the daughter-in-law was capable! In 2019, Zhang Dandan became General Manager of the investment company; in 2020, she was appointed Vice Chairman of the group. By 2023, she became the third-largest shareholder of Yingjia Group with 8.76%, behind her father-in-law’s 22.06% and her husband’s 9.48%.
In October 2025, Zhang Dandan officially became Vice Chairman of Yingjia Gongjiu. This was the first time this position was created since the company’s listing—an obvious step closer to succession.
In the Baijiu industry, seniority and experience matter most. The old man didn’t give the position to his son, nor did he hire outside professional managers; instead, he gradually promoted his daughter-in-law. This also shows that, in his eyes, she’s more reliable than his son or outsiders.
As a “family member,” Zhang Dandan has both comprehensive business experience and shareholding in capital, making her succession stance very clear.
3./ Daughter-in-law who refuses to be a “luxury vase” begins to shoulder family business responsibilities/
Compared to traditional family succession, daughters-in-law taking over is still relatively rare.
But as more founders grow old, succession has become a Damocles sword hanging over family enterprises. Many face the same dilemma: sons don’t want to, can’t do, or are incapable; daughters are married off and inconvenient; sons-in-law are afraid of splitting assets or seizing power. After much hesitation, it turns out that daughters-in-law becoming successors is often the best solution.
For example, Wanchang Technology, listed in 2011, saw its founder Gao Qingchang suddenly pass away just three days after the IPO, plunging the company into chaos.
Who would hold the fort? The son, Gao Baolin, inherited shares, but the one who truly stabilized the situation was daughter-in-law Yu Xiuyuan.
Yu Xiuyuan, an accountant by training, served as deputy general manager, CFO, and ultimately became chairwoman. After her father-in-law’s death, she took charge in a crisis, stabilizing both the capital market and internal team during turbulent times.
Many think succession means becoming chairman, appearing on TV, giving speeches at annual meetings. But it’s not only about holding the top position; in many traditional families: the son manages production and factories; the daughter-in-law manages assets, finances, and shares.
For example, Midea’s family—one of China’s top household appliance giants—compared to the well-known He Xiangjian and He Jianfeng father-son duo, few notice that daughter-in-law Lu Deyan is in charge of the family’s real estate sector.
Lu Deyan is very low-profile. In 2013, to develop real estate independently, He Xiangjian transferred all Midea Real Estate’s shares to her name, and Midea Real Estate began to rise.
Her son, He Jianfeng, handles investments, strategy, and external image (Yingfeng Group); daughter-in-law Lu Deyan manages real estate, property, and stabilizes the core business. The daughter-in-law holding real industry assets looks like the “ballast stone” of the family.
Another family-influenced A-share bread leader—Taoli Bread—has third daughter-in-law Xiao Shuying as a key figure. Though she rarely appears in headlines, check their announcements—her name appears everywhere: shareholding, capital operations, reductions, and share structure.
For example, in February this year, Taoli Bread announced that the actual controller Wu Zhigang and his associate Xiao Shuying planned to reduce holdings. Xiao Shuying owns about 6.017 million shares, accounting for 0.38%, preparing to liquidate.
In short, those who can manage money are the real insiders.
Why is “daughter-in-law succession” increasingly popular in A-shares? Because sons don’t want to, can’t do well, or have their own careers outside; rather than forcing a weak successor, it’s better to replace them directly.
But daughters-in-law seem inherently “safer” than sons-in-law—after all, sons-in-law are outsiders, and there’s a risk of splitting assets or seizing power; daughters-in-law, married into the family, have children with the family surname, which in the eyes of elders, makes the blood ties more trustworthy.
But for family businesses, the cruelest and simplest truth is—whoever can keep the company alive, gets to lead. Sometimes, ability matters more than bloodline.
So now, a new trend of “daughter-in-law succession” is emerging in the market, and the older generation’s succession ideas are opening up: