Mu Dian faced suppression from Mu Chun in everything he attempted overseas. He was just a minor manager of a branch of the Mu Family's business, and all his activities were controlled and limited. For five years, he had no significant achievements, yet he had always been covertly competing with Mu Chun.
What he lacked was the twenty percent share that could change his status and identity.
When Mu Dian, holding those shares, walked into the Mu Family's office building for the shareholders' meeting and demanded to elect a new chairman, Mu Chun's face turned dark. Even if Mu Dian couldn't secure the chairman's position, the twenty percent of the shares he held meant he was the Mu Family's largest shareholder.
Because Mu Chun only held seventeen percent.
And the old man held fifty percent of the Mu Family's shares, with another thirteen percent floating in the stock market.