Tue, 21-Oct-2025

China’s super-rich relocate their wealth and partying to Singapore

Singapore
  • Chinese families are trying to hide their fortune from the Communist Party.
  • The country’s mega-rich have already booked flights to Singapore.
  • The important Asian financial center checks all the criteria for migrating tycoons.

Singapore is experiencing an inflow of ultra-wealthy Chinese families trying to hide their fortune from a Communist Party that is more suspicious of them.

Beijing’s recent crackdowns on internet billionaires and tax-evading celebrities, along with three years of zero COVID, have prompted many wealthy Chinese to seek refuge abroad.

Insiders told that some of the country’s mega-rich have already booked flights to Singapore, concerned about the fate of their assets.

The important Asian financial center checks all the criteria for migrating tycoons.

For the past six decades, Singapore has been ruled by a single party, and labor strikes and street rallies are prohibited. Taxes are quite low, and the majority of the population is ethnic Chinese.

Recent Chinese arrivals have made their influence felt in Singapore, with some relocating to luxurious villas with waterfront views on Sentosa Island, which also has a theme park, a casino, and a prominent golf club.

“You can only imagine how they spend their money. It’s insane, “Pearce Cheng, CEO of AIMS, an immigration and relocation firm, agreed.

He remembers visiting a client’s party when he was served a rare Japanese “Yamazaki 55″ whisky costing roughly $800,000 per bottle.

Cheng’s firm also assists in the purchase of luxury condos, the hiring of chauffeurs, and the enrollment of children in private schools. It has even spent $61,000 on cigars.

The newcomers drive Rolls Royces and Bentleys and are frequently seen at top-tier golf clubs like as the exclusive Sentosa Golf Club, which charges international members $670,000 per year.

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My money is mine

Moving to Singapore puts China’s wealth beyond the grasp of Beijing, whose recent high-profile crackdowns have alarmed billionaires.

When Chinese regulators canceled a big IPO in 2020, Jack Ma, one of the most recognizable faces in Asian business, lost an estimated $25 billion.

Other Chinese tycoons are concerned that the Communist Party may apply similar pressure or possibly take over their enterprises at low rates, according to an accountant familiar with the situation.

“Moving to Singapore is about ensuring that the family money is protected and can last for future generations,” explained the accountant.

According to another industry insider, Singapore is becoming considered as a home rather than merely a backup plan, with clients telling him, “At least when I’m here, I know my money is mine.”

Haidilao, the founder of China’s largest hotpot chain, has established a so-called family office in Singapore.

According to the Monetary Authority of Singapore, the number of family offices – wealth management firms specialised to individual and group assets — increased from 400 in 2020 to 700 in 2021.

Loh Kia Meng, co-head of Dentons Rodyk’s private wealth and family office practises, projected that 1,500 family offices would have been established by the end of last year.

“I won’t be surprised if the total figure by the end of 2022 shows that one out of two new family offices originates from China,” Loh said.

Neutral zone

Analysts expect the outflow to continue even if China’s tight zero-COVID policy and limits have already been eased.

Political tensions between Beijing and Washington are fueling the desire of China’s wealthiest to relocate abroad.

According to Song Seng Wun, a regional economist at CIMB Private Banking, Singapore is a “very handy neutral zone” where the mega-rich may conduct business.

The city-state has skillfully handled its relations with both Washington and Beijing, maintaining close security connections with the US while retaining strong trading ties with China.

“Media attention on prominent wealthy individuals setting up family offices in Singapore cast the spotlight on our little island and stirred interest,” said Loh.

“If the worlds rich are congregating in Singapore, why not me?

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Beijing has hit ‘temporary herd immunity,’ official says

Beijing
  • China’s unparalleled virus wave is fading.
  • COVID deaths nationwide have dropped by over 80%.
  • The city would survey thousands of citizens in February and March.

BEIJING – Beijing has reached “temporary herd immunity,” and its COVID outbreak is nearing a conclusion, according to a city health official, another indicator that China’s unparalleled virus wave is fading.

Since the ruling Communist Party abruptly reversed its zero-COVID policy last month, a flood of cases has swept through the world’s most populous nation.

The spike crammed hospitals and crematoriums in major cities, including Beijing, though the scope of the outbreak is difficult to confirm because official statistics are thought to represent just a small percentage of the total number of cases.

However, there are signs that the increase is slowing, with authorities reporting last week that the number of daily COVID deaths nationwide has dropped by over 80% since the beginning of January.

Beijing’s Centre for Disease Control and Prevention

Wang Quanyi, deputy head of Beijing’s Centre for Disease Control and Prevention, told local media Tuesday that the metropolis of 22 million has “established temporary herd immunity protection”.

“This wave of infections in Beijing has already peaked and is now coming to an end,” the state News quoted Wang as saying.

The capital was “currently in a state of sporadic infections” with the virus exhibiting a “relatively low risk of transmission”, Wang said.

According to official data, the number of persons seeking treatment for flu-like diseases at major Beijing hospitals dropped by more than 40% between January 23 and 29, compared to the previous week.

According to Wang, a national decrease in the number of illnesses showed that the end of the Lunar New Year break would “not have too much of an impact” when people returned to Beijing from other regions of the country.

He went on to say that the city would survey thousands of citizens in February and March to see how many have COVID antibodies in their blood plasma.

The survey will “comprehensively assess Beijing’s state of coronavirus infection” and “provide a reference for optimizing resource allocation in the future,” Wang said.

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COVID-19 lockdown imposed in Pyongyang for five days

COVID-19
  • A five-day lockdown in North Korea’s capital.
  • People in the capital appeared to be in a panic.
  • It is unclear whether the lockdown extended beyond Pyongyang.

Pyongyang: A five-day lockdown of the capital Pyongyang has been ordered by North Korea due to an increase in cases of an unidentified respiratory illness.

The Seoul-based outlet that covers North Korea reported that residents were required to stay in their homes until the end of Sunday and submit to multiple temperature checks every day, citing a government announcement.

The notice did not specifically mention COVID-19, but North Korea did not do so during its first outbreak last year, when it only mentioned “fever” cases.

People in the capital appeared to be “panic-buying food in large quantities” on Tuesday, amid rumors of a lockdown.

Due to limited testing capabilities, North Korea acknowledged its first COVID-19 outbreak last year but did not provide the precise number of cases. In August, it declared “victory” over the outbreak.

State media has not yet covered the lockdown order, but has continued to cover anti-pandemic measures to combat respiratory illnesses like the flu.

At celebrations for the Lunar New Year, Pyongyang residents were photographed wearing face masks, some of them double-masking or donning masks of a higher grade.

It was unclear whether the lockdown extended beyond Pyongyang.

Since abandoning its zero-COVID policy late last year, China, North Korea’s main ally and trading partner has seen an increase in cases.

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Japan PM says declining birthrate puts nation on verge of collapse

Japan

Less than 800,000 births are thought to have occurred in Japan last year. The number was above two million in the 1970s. Many nations, including Japan’s neighbors, are seeing a slowdown in birth rates. The nation’s declining birth rate puts it in danger of losing its ability to function as a society. according to the … Read more

Replacement of New Zealand prime minister Ardern?

Ardern
  • Jacinda Ardern’s resignation triggered a drive for New Zealand to elect its first Maori prime minister.
  • The new prime minister will be chosen by Labour lawmakers on Sunday.
  • To win, a candidate must receive two-thirds of the vote.

Jacinda Ardern’s unexpected departure triggered a drive for New Zealand to elect its first Maori prime minister on Friday as a small group of contenders for the position emerged.

Less than three years after clinching a second term in a landslide election victory, Ardern, a global icon for progressive politics, shocked New Zealand on Thursday by abruptly announcing her resignation.

The 42-year-old said she no longer had “enough in the tank” after leading the nation through natural disasters, the Covid outbreak, and its worst-ever terror incident.

Without a clear substitute, Ardern resigned, and the Labour Party, which she led, is now rushing to find someone.

The new prime minister will be chosen by Labour lawmakers on Sunday; to win, a candidate must receive two-thirds of the vote.

If that doesn’t happen, it will turn into a protracted election involving party activists and linked unions.

The early favorite is 44-year-old Chris Hipkins after Ardern’s deputy Grant Robertson abruptly withdrew from the race.

One of Labour’s senior Maori MPs, Kiri Allan, the minister of justice, and Michael Wood, the minister of immigration, are additional candidates.

None of the three have yet declared that they will challenge the election.

Maori leader in office?

It has been suggested that Allan, a former commercial lawyer who was elected to parliament in 2017, could be the country’s first Maori leader.

After learning that she had stage 3 cervical cancer in April 2021, she was obliged to leave the House of Representatives; nevertheless, she quickly got back to work.

The 15-person Maori caucus inside Labour is anticipated to play an important role in choosing the new leader.

The most recent census in New Zealand revealed that 17% of its five million residents identify as Maori.

Influential Labour minister Kelvin Davis stated, “Obviously, we’d love for their to be a Maori prime minister one day.

Former Labour Maori caucus co-chair Willie Jackson emphasized the importance of participating in those conversations.

We want to participate because we’re talking about our country’s prime minister, he remarked.

The Maori Party, also known as Te Pati Maori, runs for office in the specifically designated Maori electorates. It said that a Maori-born prime minister was needed.

Co-leaders Debbie Ngarewa-Packer and Rawiri Waititi said in a statement that “anything less will be taking Aotearoa (New Zealand) backwards from Jacinda Ardern.”

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China: As holiday travel increases, critical COVID cases have peaked

COVID
  • Millions travel across the country for Lunar New Year
  • 60,000 people with COVID died in hospitals
  • Daily deaths could hit 36,000 next week.

The number of COVID patients requiring critical care in Chinese hospitals has peaked, according to health officials, as millions travel across the country for long-awaited family reunions, raising fears of new outbreaks.

Since abruptly removing anti-virus controls that had protected China‘s 1.4 billion people from the disease for three years last month, there has been widespread skepticism about China’s official COVID data.

China revealed on Saturday that nearly 60,000 people with COVID died in hospitals between December 8 and January 12, a tenfold increase from previous disclosures.

However, that figure excludes those who die at home, and some Chinese doctors have stated that they are discouraged from including COVID on death certificates.

According to the latest forecasts from UK-based health data firm Airfinity, as travel increases during the busy Lunar New Year holiday season, up to 36,000 people could die from the disease each day. Other experts predict that more than a million people will die from the disease this year.

However, a National Health Commission official stated at a press conference on Thursday that China has passed the peak period for COVID patients in fever clinics, emergency rooms, and in critical condition.

According to an official, the number of patients in critical condition in hospitals was more than 40% lower on Jan. 17 than at the peak on Jan. 5.

The new data comes after President Xi Jinping expressed concern that rural areas would be unprepared to deal with an increase in infections as the holidays, which begin on January 21, bring throngs of city dwellers back to their hometowns.

Essential Burden

Affinity estimated on Wednesday that 62 million people could be infected with the virus between January 13 and January 27 and that COVID-related daily deaths could peak at 36,000 on January 26, a significant increase from previous estimates.

“Our forecast predicts a significant burden on China’s healthcare system over the next two weeks, and it is likely that many treatable patients will die as a result of overcrowded hospitals and a lack of care,” said Airfinity’s analytics director Matt Linley.

Beyond the death toll, there is hope that China’s reopening will reenergize a $17 trillion economy that is experiencing one of its lowest growth rates in nearly a half-century.

After years of virus restrictions and a recent wave of infections disrupted business, owners and managers of China’s factories, which produce nearly a third of the world’s manufactured goods, hope to return to normalcy.

The IMF’s Deputy Managing Director Gita Gopinath said on Wednesday at the World Economic Forum in Davos that China could see a sharp recovery beginning in the second quarter.

These expectations have propelled China’s stock markets and the yuan currency to multi-month highs in recent sessions.

Chinese-controlled Hong Kong, which is attempting to revitalize its finance and trade-dependent economy, announced on Thursday that people infected with COVID-19 will not be required to quarantine beginning January 30, removing one of the city’s last major virus restrictions.

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China’s population has declined for the first time in 60 years

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The population decreased by 850,000 from 2021 to 2022, reaching 1.4118 billion. For the first time ever, deaths also exceeded births in China last year. Chinese President Xi Jinping called increasing birth rates a top priority in October 2022. China’s population has decreased for the first time in 60 years with a record-low national birth … Read more

China reports almost 60,000 Covid-related deaths in 1 month

China

China reports 54,435 overall COVID-related deaths from December 8 through Thursday. More than 90% of those who passed away had cancer, heart, lung, or kidney issues. China abruptly lifted anti-virus regulations in December and stopped releasing data. China has responded to allegations that it was withholding statistics by reporting roughly 60,000 deaths among Covid victims, … Read more

Kevin Williamson has high regard for the New York sequel to Scream VI

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Covid drug shortage in china increases frustration

Drug
  • The price demanded is too high.
  • Many people have turned to the black market.
  • Pfizer declined to comment on the price it had proposed.

Hong Kong- The government’s failure to negotiate an agreement with prized drug Pfizer to include Paxlovid in its national insurance plan was aggravated by a revelation Sunday that the price demanded was too high, according to officials. This decision may imply that after March 31, the drug will only be available to individuals who can afford to pay full price, which is currently roughly 1,900 yuan ($280) for each course.

Many people have turned to the black market in recent weeks, where hawkers claim to provide Covid medicines ranging from illegal imports of Indian-made generics of Pfizer’s Paxlovid and Merck’s molnupiravir to the genuine substance – at up to nearly eight times the market price.

When taken promptly after the onset of symptoms, Paxlovid has been found to lower the risk of death and hospitalization in high-risk patients. The medicine, which is commonly used in industrialized countries, was approved as the first oral pill particularly for Covid in China in February.

The traditional Chinese remedy Qingfei Paidu and the domestic antiviral drug Azvudine were two more treatments utilized for Covid-19 that China did agree to pay in the most recent negotiations. Data on Azvudine’s effectiveness in preventing serious illness are scarce.

Prized drug

Currently, Pfizer’s imported pill is available in community hospitals in some cities, including Beijing, Shanghai, Tianjin, and Guangzhou.

It is also supplied on a number of e-commerce sites, where some local news reports indicate that supply issues are beginning to ease.

However, there are questions about how broadly the pills will be distributed across China.

This is a critical issue as the epidemic spreads from major cities to smaller ones and rural China. According to experts, procurement appears to be decentralized, with the pills being easier to locate at hospitals in major cities with more resources and harder to find elsewhere.

Statement from CEO

Albert Bourla, the CEO of Pfizer, stated on Monday that the business had increased exports, sending millions of courses of Paxlovid to China in the previous few weeks and that it was collaborating with its domestic partner Zhejiang Huahai to produce Paxlovid in China in the first half of this year.

But Bourla also dispelled hopes that the business may strike a deal with China for domestic drugmakers to create a generic version of the medication to be sold domestically when addressing at a conference in San Francisco.

Merck announced on its WeChat account that it will pursue legal action against some producers who were selling counterfeit versions of its Covid medication. The company will also collaborate with regional business Sinopharm to export its pill, Lagevrio, to China.

However, as the current shortages – and cost concerns – play out in one of the main countries producing generic drugs, they also shine a light on international challenges relating to intellectual property rights, according to specialists who look at access to medications.

The WHO-affiliated Medicines Patent Pool (MPP) reports that two Chinese firms have submitted their goods for review by the WHO. Zhejiang Huahai and Apeloa Pharmaceutical, along with two others in China, were granted sublicenses to produce the full generic pill in 2022.

Such flexibilities have the potential to irk foreign pharmaceutical companies and the countries where they are based, experts say. China’s concerns about impacting the local economy were likely a key reason for its reticence to use such measures.

Beijing this month called on authorities to enhance oversight of online sales of drugs and crack down on price gouging.

Pfizer negotiations halt due to cost

China is yet to approve a foreign-made vaccine for the Covid virus. Instead, its regulators have opted for homegrown antiviral pills to combat the pandemic. A top health official on Wednesday said that hundreds of pills to alleviate Covid symptoms were already covered by insurance and new viral treatments were in the pipeline.

Borla claimed on Monday that negotiations ceased because China demanded a lower price than Pfizer is seeking from the majority of lower middle-income nations.

In a separate statement, Pfizer declined to comment on the price it had proposed, but stated that it was “committed to meeting the Covid-19 treatment needs of Chinese patients” and that it “will continue to collaborate with the Chinese government and all relevant stakeholders to secure an adequate supply of Paxlovid in China.”

However, for individuals who have been dealing with the immediate issues of acquiring access to medications for themselves and their families, like Wang in Beijing, there is a sense that the system isn’t functioning—at least not right now.

“It is cruel. There is nothing we can do, no matter how we feel”, she said. It is untrue that your efforts or hopes will improve the situation.

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Andrew Bridgen suspended as Tory MP over Covid vaccine comments

Andrew Bridgen

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Satellite images show crowding at China’s crematoriums and burial homes

Satellite images

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China blocks all visas from South Korea and Japan due to Covid

China

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More than 88 million people in Henan infected, says official

Covid

Covid infection has already spread to about 90% of the population in Henan. China is dealing with extraordinary rise of cases since giving up its zero Covid rules. Only 120,000 out of 1.4 billion individuals in the country have been sick and 30 died. Covid infection has already spread to about 90% of the population … Read more

China blocks social media accounts of Covid policy critics

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Hong Kong lifts hamster import prohibition

Hong Kong

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Celebrity deaths raise concerns about China’s death toll

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WHO: China ‘under-representing’ true impact of Covid outbreak

Covid

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Joe Biden expresses “worry” about China COVID situation

Joe Biden
  • WHO says China underreported virus-related deaths, hospital admissions, and patients in ICU.
  • US added its name to the list of nations that have limitations on tourists from China.
  • Hospitals in China are at capacity and the country’s burial homes are being overrun.

In response to the World Health Organization’s (WHO) criticism of Beijing, US Vice President Joe Biden expressed alarm over the Covid situation in China.

According to WHO, China underreported virus-related deaths, hospital admissions, and patients in intensive care units.

After China ended its draconian “Zero Covid policy” after almost three years, the United States added its name to the list of nations that have limitations on tourists from China. According to reports, hospitals in China are at capacity and the country’s burial homes are being overrun by the influx.

Joe Biden’s statement about China’s response to the epidemic, “They’re very sensitive … when we suggest they haven’t been that forthcoming.”

Beijing announced one connected fatality on the mainland on Wednesday, down from five on Tuesday, bringing the total number of deaths associated with the Covid issue to 5,259. This is despite Beijing continuing to downplay how serious the situation is.

While European Union officials advised that passengers flying from China should have a negative test before they begin their flights, certain nations have made it mandatory for travelers from China to undergo Covid testing. In response to concerns about the new variety, nations have also started testing and sequencing wastewater on aircraft coming from China and at airports that handle international flights. The limitations have drawn criticism from Beijing, which has dubbed them unreasonable and unscientific.

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92 unclaimed bodies buried in mass grave in Papua New Guinea

Papua New Guinea

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Australia, Canada restricts Chinese Covid travelers

Covid

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England requires negative test for arrivals from China

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Covid resurge: CAA begins screening passengers at airports

Covid screening

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