https://www.newsmax.com/newsfront/china-frx-gen-gov/2020/06/13/id/972043/?oRef=vuukle


 Tags: China
<https://www.newsmax.com/hottopics/topic/china/379/?oRef=vuukle> | CHINA
<https://www.newsmax.com/newsfront/china-frx-gen-gov/2020/06/13/id/972043/?oRef=vuukle#>
 | FRX
<https://www.newsmax.com/newsfront/china-frx-gen-gov/2020/06/13/id/972043/?oRef=vuukle#>
 | GEN
<https://www.newsmax.com/newsfront/china-frx-gen-gov/2020/06/13/id/972043/?oRef=vuukle#>
 | GOV
<https://www.newsmax.com/newsfront/china-frx-gen-gov/2020/06/13/id/972043/?oRef=vuukle#>
 | HK
<https://www.newsmax.com/newsfront/china-frx-gen-gov/2020/06/13/id/972043/?oRef=vuukle#>
 | MARKETS
<https://www.newsmax.com/newsfront/china-frx-gen-gov/2020/06/13/id/972043/?oRef=vuukle#>
<https://www.newsmax.com/newsfront/china-frx-gen-gov/2020/06/13/id/972043/?oRef=vuukle>
Hong Kong's Rich Are Preparing for a Worst-Case Scenario
[image: Hong Kong's Rich Are Preparing for a Worst-Case Scenario]
Protests in Hong Kong last year (AP)

Saturday, 13 June 2020 06:42 PM

<https://www.newsmax.com/newsfront/china-frx-gen-gov/2020/06/13/id/972043/?oRef=vuukle#>
<https://www.newsmax.com/newsfront/china-frx-gen-gov/2020/06/13/id/972043/?oRef=vuukle#>
<https://www.newsmax.com/newsfront/china-frx-gen-gov/2020/06/13/id/972043/?oRef=vuukle#>
<https://www.newsmax.com/newsfront/china-frx-gen-gov/2020/06/13/id/972043/?oRef=vuukle#>
Short URL
<https://www.newsmax.com/newsfront/china-frx-gen-gov/2020/06/13/id/972043/?oRef=vuukle#>
|
Email Article
<https://www.newsmax.com/newsfront/china-frx-gen-gov/2020/06/13/id/972043/?oRef=vuukle#>
|
Comment
<https://www.newsmax.com/newsfront/china-frx-gen-gov/2020/06/13/id/972043/?oRef=vuukle#>
|
Contact
<https://www.newsmax.com/newsfront/china-frx-gen-gov/2020/06/13/id/972043/?oRef=vuukle#>
|
Print|
    A
<https://www.newsmax.com/newsfront/china-frx-gen-gov/2020/06/13/id/972043/?oRef=vuukle#textSize>
   A
<https://www.newsmax.com/newsfront/china-frx-gen-gov/2020/06/13/id/972043/?oRef=vuukle#textSize>
<https://www.newsmax.com/newsfront/china-frx-gen-gov/2020/06/13/id/972043/?oRef=vuukle#>
[image: Copy Shortlink]
<https://www.newsmax.com/newsfront/china-frx-gen-gov/2020/06/13/id/972043/?oRef=vuukle#>

One Hong Kong businessman moved $10 million to Singapore and plans to
transfer more. Another is eyeing London property, worried that prices in
Hong Kong are too high. Well-to-do families across the city are opening
offshore bank accounts and applying for alternative passports.

While it doesn’t add up to an exodus just yet, Hong Kong’s rich are
increasingly hedging their bets as the financial hub suffers its worst
economic and political crises since at least 1997.

Many high-net-worth investors are either reducing their Hong Kong exposure
or taking steps to ensure they can withdraw assets at a moment’s notice,
underscoring the challenge for Chief Executive Carrie Lam as she tries to
maintain the city’s status as magnet for Asian wealth. Rich individuals are
major players in Hong Kong’s equity and real-estate markets as well as big
buyers of Chinese corporate bonds issued in the city.

Private bankers say their clients accelerated contingency planning efforts
after China announced last month it would impose controversial national
security laws on Hong Kong. The legislation threatens to erode the former
British colony’s judicial independence, provoke sanctions from the U.S. and
revive street protests that battered the tourism and retail industries even
before the coronavirus outbreak plunged the economy into its deepest
recession on record.

“What we’re basically seeing is a bit like a slow-moving train wreck,” said
Richard Harris, chief executive of Port Shelter Investment Management in
Hong Kong. “People who haven’t moved their money out may be tempted to
think: ‘Well, maybe I should be moving my money out.’ That process is
likely to continue.”

To be sure, there’s little evidence so far of widespread capital flight.

Hong Kong bank deposits increased to a record in April and the city’s
currency has continued to trade at the strong end of its permitted band
against the dollar. Hong Kong’s wealthiest billionaires have publicly
endorsed the proposed security laws and expressed confidence in the city’s
future.

In private, however, many Hong Kong entrepreneurs and high-earning
professionals are sounding a more pessimistic note.

Cheng, the businessman who moved $10 million to Singapore, also secured his
permanent resident status in the city-state this year and has been selling
his Hong Kong properties. He has no concrete plans to emigrate yet, but is
considering his options. He and his family have passports from the U.S.,
Canada, Australia and France.

Cheng, who was born in Hong Kong, said he worries about China’s tightening
grip on the city and the prospect for more unrest. Like several of the
people quoted in this story, he asked not to reveal his full name because
of the political sensitivity of the subject.

Sam, a senior investment banker in Hong Kong, has decided to leave the
city. The 43-year-old is emigrating to Australia with his wife and two
young boys in about three months, the second time he will have left Hong
Kong during a period of political turmoil. Sam grew up in the city, but
moved to Brisbane when he was 12 after his parents got spooked by China’s
crackdown on protesters in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square in 1989. He came back
to Hong Kong 20 years ago for his career but now sees no upside to staying.

“Things are looking bad and deteriorating,” he said. “We may as well pack
our bags and move to Australia so that the kids can have a better
environment growing up.”

Margaret Chau, a Hong Kong-based immigration program director for Goldmax
Immigration Consulting Co., said inquiries at her firm have jumped about
five-fold after news of the national security legislation. For now, most of
her wealthy customers are more interested setting up an escape route than
leaving right away.

“They see this as a backup plan,” Chau said.

Kerry Goh, chief executive officer of multi-family office Kamet Capital in
Singapore, said his clients have shifted from asking generic questions
about moving out of Hong Kong to making detailed inquiries about everything
from schools to visas and bank accounts.

“What’s happened in Hong Kong has really sped up the timing of 2047,” Goh
said, referring to the expiration date of China’s 50-year pledge to
preserve Hong Kong’s autonomy after the handover from Britain. “As Hong
Kong’s troubles shoot up, the benefits of Singapore have become more
self-explanatory.”

Other more far-flung locales are also attracting increased interest from
investors in Hong Kong. Puerto Rico’s Standard International Bank, a
so-called International Financial Entity that expanded its footprint in
Asia last year, has seen its deposits more than triple since December 2019,
according to general manager Maria Diaz. “Turbulence in Hong Kong has
changed the landscape,” she said.

Dennis, a 34-year-old executive at a Hong Kong-based consulting firm
founded by his parents, said his family and many of their friends have
started moving cash out of the city. He’s looking to buy more properties in
the U.K., where he spent almost a decade attending boarding school and
university.

“I could buy a much bigger flat in London, so why not?” he said. “I’m just
trying to protect my money against any uncertainty.”

© Copyright 2020 Bloomberg News. All rights reserved.

Kirim email ke