Money is sloshing around Singapore like never before. Family offices, Bentley sales and real estate prices are booming.
For
rich people “who can decide where they want to live and settle down,
Singapore is a place of choice now,” said Stephan Repkow, who founded
Wealth Management Alliance in 2015 after four years at Union Bancaire
Privee. He said two of his foreign clients had become residents in the
past 12 months and more are on the way.
Singapore has long been a
draw for wealthy Chinese, Indonesians and Malaysians who would come for
short trips to shop, play baccarat at the casino or get medical
check-ups at world-class clinics. Mount Elizabeth Hospital Orchard, just
steps from the flagship stores of Gucci and Rolex, features a UOB
Privilege Banking Centre in the lobby.
The pandemic has changed
all that, prompting many tycoons and their families to stay for months,
in some cases seeking residency to ride out the storm. On a per capita
basis, the mortality rates in Malaysia and Indonesia are more than 10
and 30 times higher than in Singapore, according to data collected by
Johns Hopkins University.
The number of single family offices in
the city-state has doubled since the end of 2019 to about 400, including
firms recently set up by Google co-founder Sergey Brin and Shu Ping,
the billionaire behind Chinese hotpot empire Haidilao International
Holding Ltd. Demand for private golf club memberships is soaring, real
estate prices have jumped the most since 2018 and until the recent
clampdown, Michelin-star restaurants were packed. Global banks like UBS
Group AG meanwhile are expanding in the city to manage the massive
influx of assets.
Seletar Aiport, the hub for private jets, has
seen demand for hangar space soar during the pandemic, said Alan Chan,
head of business development at the 67 Pall Mall wine club, who until
November was an executive at Go-Jets.
One private jet pilot who
declined to be identified said it’s still extremely difficult to snare a
spot. While the recent strict travel rules have extended to people with
their own aircraft, he added that most expect them to ease in line with
commercial flights after a few weeks.
Singapore doesn’t divulge
many details on its super-rich migrant residents, but private bankers,
multi-family offices and other service providers say the new arrivals
are helping their businesses, in a city famous as the setting for the
“Crazy Rich Asians” film.
Harish Bahl, founder of Smile Group, a
family office that focuses on tech investment, said he’s never met this
many super rich in the city. He’s been working in the tech space for
more than two decades.
“Since the pandemic, billionaires from all
over the world have been staying on longer in Singapore, including
those from China, Indonesia, India and the U.S.,” he said, citing
incentives for setting up family offices.
All this visible
display of wealth can cause resentment, according to Toby Carroll, who
lectures on political economy at the City University of Hong Kong and
previously worked at the National University of Singapore.
“The
negative impact for the majority of people facing increased costs of
living—including of housing—declining social mobility and rising
inequality bodes poorly for social cohesion,” he said in an email. “The
link between rising inequality and social instability is very real.”
Anonymous
Singapore is being turned into a safe haven for the filthy rich
ReplyDeleteThis is the result of making all the ministers and top civil servants become multi-billionaires.
This is not a glorious endeavor but a great shame because it is the sign and symbol of greed.
"How to treat the problem of rising healthcare costs" - ST headline.
ReplyDeleteStart by reducing the total population size of 5.7 million: there're 3.4 million Singaporeans (incl new citizens) and 2.3 million foreigners competing for scarce resources on the tiny island city state, up from just 4.0 million total population size in 2004 . .
Stop paying million dollar salaries.
ReplyDeleteHow to reduce health costs and also other costs:
ReplyDeleteReduce the number of ministries and ministers.
Too many cooks spoil the broth.
Too many ministers waste taxpayers' money, efforts, and resources.
Stop giving the foreign free loaders and free riders free vaccines and medical treatments.
Stop giving foreigners free money. Send them home if they are COVID-19 virus carriers.
And also reduce the budget of Statutory Boards, such as the People's Association and many others by 70%. At present, these Statutory Boards are over-funded to obscene levels, like the ministers' salaries and bonuses.
The MMTF, Multi Ministry Task Force, now has 3 ministers in it, ie 3 million dollar ministers handling one single problem. How costly is it?
ReplyDeleteOther countries, 1 minister, paid 10% of our minister, also can handle. China or Indian ministers paid only a fraction of a million.
How much of the S$100 billion COVID-19 relief splashed last year are spent on foreigners?
ReplyDeletemonies have gone mostly to GLCs and companies through wage subsidies. Little has flowed directly to peasant pockets whether local or foreign....
ReplyDeleteLike to say that soon, All the Loaded shall be fleeing Sin. Like the Passengers in the COVID-INFECTED LUXURY CRUISE SHIPS, NONE WILL WANT TO RRMAIN IN THEM.
ReplyDeleteOther than COVID, there are Tuberculosis, Dengue and lnevitable Social Dis-order to contend with.
Just watch it happens.
Banks bulk up in Hong Kong as China business overshadows politics - Reuters June 4
ReplyDeleteSome global banks, funds and other financial services providers say they are stepping up hiring in Hong Kong, in a sign the city’s unique position as a financial gateway to China is outweighing concerns about Beijing’s tightening grip over it.
Goldman Sachs Group Inc, Citigroup Inc, UBS AG and other banks are each hiring hundreds of people in the city this year, adding substantially to their existing ranks.
Citigroup, for example, has said it is bulking up its staffing by 1,500 people, including additional headcount and replacements in 2021, double the number of people it hired a year ago. It has about 4,000 people in the city. A Goldman spokesman said the bank, which has about 2,000 people in Greater China, expects hiring in Hong Kong to be up 20% this year.
The Securities and Futures Commission, Hong Kong's market regulator, is seeing a rebound in licenses it issues for people involved in asset management, securities and other financial activities, according to data on its website. The total number of licenses it issued was up 1.7% at the end of March, compared with nine months earlier, and just shy of an all-time peak in 2019.
"Hong Kong has some unique advantages, and it will remain the gateway for many of our local and global clients to access China," said Kaleem Rizvi, Head of Citi's Asia-Pacific corporate bank.
Many financial companies slowed hiring last year, after protests against Chinese rule and a new security law imposed on the city to crush dissent by Beijing, as well as the coronavirus pandemic, six bankers, recruiters and other industry executives said.
The increased hiring plans of some major players show that they are now willing to live with the political risks.
"Everyone in the business community I have spoken with welcomes the peace and stability now, compared with the chaos of 2019 ," said Weijian Shan, chairman and chief executive of Hong Kong-based private equity group PAG.
The increased hiring plans of some major players show that they are now willing to live with the political risks.
ReplyDelete"Everyone in the business community I have spoken with welcomes the peace and stability now, compared with the chaos of 2019 ," said Weijian Shan, chairman and chief executive of Hong Kong-based private equity group PAG.
There is really no political risk in HK as China would want to make it a success.
The only risk is from the evil Americans trying to bring down China with HK as a collateral. But China as the biggest consumer market in the world would be a tough proposition to bring down. Bringing down China would bring down the US and the rest of the world.
Life and Safety are far more precious than money, asset and status. Wise people will not expose themselves to killer disease, climate change and lack of resources.
ReplyDeleteThe Tiny Barren Rock shall see the Exodus of the Filthy Rich. Dyson Boss had set the Ball Rolling.
The rich and powerful would not expose themselves too. But they would not mind exposing others for their own interest.
ReplyDelete