https://forums.hardwarezone.com.sg/threads/singapore-starts-7-5-million-fund-to-woo-next-crazy-rich-asians.6889911/
https://mothership.sg/2023/12/dpm-lawrence-wong-jcbc-op-ed/
chartiskao ( Date: 08-Dec-2023 16:02) Posted:
|
He&rsquo s hoping that studying at a university in the Asian financial hub will lead to permanent residency and while the 26-year-old hits the books, his wife is out looking for a S$5-7 million ($4-5 million) penthouse.
&ldquo Singapore is great. It is stable and offers a lot of investment opportunities,&rdquo Zhang told Reuters at a business and philanthropy forum here late last year. His family might establish a Singapore family office to manage its wealth in the future, he added.
 
&ldquo Singapore is great. It is stable and offers a lot of investment opportunities,&rdquo Zhang told Reuters at a business and philanthropy forum here late last year. His family might establish a Singapore family office to manage its wealth in the future, he added.
 
chartiskao ( Date: 08-Dec-2023 15:58) Posted:
|
they will buy out the bank if it is cheap
https://kelo.com/2023/01/30/disillusioned-at-home-super-rich-chinese-set-their-sights-on-singapore/
https://kelo.com/2023/01/30/disillusioned-at-home-super-rich-chinese-set-their-sights-on-singapore/
chartiskao ( Date: 08-Dec-2023 15:51) Posted:
|
this rich crazy money are here for three years doing nothing nut after 2024...sg may see some cations from this money soon
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xvI0nNNvi4A
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xvI0nNNvi4A
chartiskao ( Date: 08-Dec-2023 15:49) Posted:
|
US' s bloddy interest rate already peaking but
https://www.straitstimes.com/business/rich-chinese-splashing-out-on-luxury-have-yet-to-invest-big-in-singapore
https://www.straitstimes.com/business/rich-chinese-splashing-out-on-luxury-have-yet-to-invest-big-in-singapore
chartiskao ( Date: 08-Dec-2023 15:46) Posted:
|
For China, 2023 was supposed to be a year of economic revival.  Instead, Asia&rsquo s biggest economy has seen its biggest capital flight in years, an outflux pushing wealthy Chinese nationals to Singapore as an emigration safe haven amid sluggish growth, a regulatory crackdown on private enterprise and ever-expanding societal controls at home.   
The inrush of Chinese money is being keenly felt in Singapore, regarded as the so-called &ldquo Switzerland of Asia&rdquo for its political neutrality and open banking facilities. High-net-worth individuals from mainland China and Hong Kong are believed to have contributed to record capital inflows into the city-state in the past two years.
That, in turn, has contributed to soaring property and rental prices that helped drive inflation to a 14-year high earlier this year. Meanwhile, anecdotes and images of &ldquo crazy rich&rdquo Chinese emigres flaunting their wealth in tough times have gone viral, with the outward displays of affluence rubbing many in Singapore the wrong way.
&ldquo It should not surprise us if Singaporeans are concerned and perceive their city-state is becoming a playground for the rich and feeling increasingly priced out,&rdquo said Eugene Tan, a political analyst and law professor at Singapore Management University (SMU), told Asia Times. &ldquo Political pressure on the government to address perceived inequality is clearly there.&rdquo
Indeed, Chinese capital inflows have become a politically sensitive issue, all the more so after local authorities arrested and charged 10 Chinese nationals in August for a range of crimes including money laundering linked to illicit proceeds from scams and illegal gambling.
Some S$2.8 billion (US$2 billion) in cash and other assets have so far been frozen or confiscated in the case. Among the accused are members of prestigious local golf clubs and donors to local charities who opted to emigrate and set up new businesses in Singapore.
One or more of those facing charges reportedly  have links  to single family offices set up by the ultra-rich to manage their money and investments and which previously were given tax incentives by the central bank.
This small Southeast Asian nation of 5.9 million has for decades provided banking and investment management services to wealthy individuals with the allure of low-income tax rates, zero levies on capital gains or inheritances, strong financial privacy laws  and generous incentives for multinational firms to establish corporate headquarters.
Investors can also become permanent residents, though the minimum threshold for investment was raised considerably in March from a previous requirement of a S$2.5 million ($1.8 million) investment in a local business entity, fund or family office to at least S$10 million ($7.4 million). Around 200 people were  granted PR  through such investments  from 2020 to 2022.

Wealthy mainland Chinese flaunt their lifestyles in a local Straits Times profile. Image: Twitter Screengrab / Straits Times
Geography and culture are also a draw for wealthy mainland Chinese looking for an exit strategy.  Around 70% of Singapore&rsquo s population is ethnic Chinese, with  Mandarin  serving as one of the city-state&rsquo s  widely spoken official languages. Popular provincial Chinese cuisines  have  also  proliferated as more mainland Chinese work and emigrate to Singapore.
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While Singapore&rsquo s government has said the recent arrests demonstrated its self-claimed zero-tolerance for crime &ndash authorities have initiated a review of anti-money laundering rules for single family offices &ndash the episode nonetheless raises &ldquo legitimate concerns whether the immigration regime is lax such that lawlessness is being &lsquo imported&rsquo into Singapore,&rdquo SMU&rsquo s Tan said.
National University of Singapore (NUS) political scientist Chong Ja Ian said the money laundering case involving Chinese nationals is &ldquo indicative of the tension between wanting to maintain banking secrecy and ease of business to attract wealth on one hand, and the need for transparency and effective regulation on the other.&rdquo He added: &ldquo It is difficult to have your cake and eat it too.&rdquo
Investment management firms have seized on a variable capital company (VCC) scheme launched in Singapore in 2020, similar to those renowned in offshore hubs like the Cayman Islands and Luxembourg  that  provide tax and legal shelter for hedge funds, venture capital and private equity firms, among others.  More than 1,000 VCCs have been  established  or re-domiciled  in Singapore this year.
Last year also saw an explosion in the number of family offices and single family offices managing the assets of the rich and sometimes famous. According to the MAS, the number of single family offices rose to 1,100 in 2022, up from just 400 in 2020.
The Boston Consulting Group estimates there are more than 800 multi-family offices in Singapore, compared to only 100 five years ago.
The boom in family offices raises questions about their upside for Singapore, said NUS&rsquo Chong. He said  family offices &ldquo tend to be light in terms of their personnel needs and often hire fund managers internationally. Moreover, if they are largely moving money around, this sort of portfolio investment tends not to directly benefit the local economy as much as foreign direct investment.&rdquo
Bloomberg,  Financial Times  and other international media outlets  have cited fund managers in Singapore saying that,  despite strong inflows of new money, family offices have largely  shied  from investing in capital markets, with accounts of wealthy newcomers instead spending lavishly on condominiums, luxury vehicles and golf club memberships.
Singapore&rsquo s residential real estate prices  spiked  14% last year, according to data from real estate consultancy firm Knight Frank. 
To cool the market, authorities introduced in April an eyewatering 60% property tax for foreign buyers and even  higher levies imposed on Singaporeans and permanent residents who purchase  second  homes. Foreign buying  reportedly  accounted for 7% of all property transactions in the first quarter of this year, up from about 6% from 2017 to 2019.

Singapore housing prices are up and up. Image: Asia Times Files / AFP / Roslan Rahman
Demand from foreign buyers has since fallen to about 4% of total transactions so far in 2023. Residential property prices have since moderated from up 11.4 % year on year in the first quarter of 2023 to 4.4% by the third quarter,  according to  the MAS, which on November 27 said private rents should continue to fall as a large number of new units are slated  for completion.
In April, the MAS strongly  refuted  a Financial Times article claiming it had  tacitly directed  bankers and regulators to avoid discussing the origin of growing capital inflows. &ldquo We haven&rsquo t been told explicitly not to talk about [China] but there is a sense in the financial services industry that talking about it publicly will not be welcomed,&rdquo an unnamed executive  was quoted  saying  in the report.
More recently, Singaporean officials have denied any pressure from Beijing in connection with recent money laundering-related arrests of Chinese nationals.
&ldquo There has been some speculation circulating in news outlets &ndash internationally and domestically &ndash that this operation was carried out at the behest of China. This is completely untrue,&rdquo Josephine Teo, Singapore&rsquo s second minister for home affairs, told parliament in early October in reference to the August arrests, which included individuals wanted in China for scams and illegal online gambling.
The perception that Singapore has acted in response to Chinese pressure &ldquo makes for eye-catching headlines but fails to recognize Singapore&rsquo s acute sensitivity to its sovereignty being trampled on,&rdquo said SMU&rsquo s Tan. He  said  that while it is imperative to deal with illegal activities with a transboundary dimension, &ldquo Singapore will not be pushed or bullied into being a policeman for China.&rdquo
If Singapore comes to be seen as a  safe destination  to skirt Beijing&rsquo s efforts to limit capital  outflows, that could &ldquo introduce complications&rdquo in Singapore-China ties, said NUS&rsquo Chong. &ldquo It is a risk that Singapore has to manage if it continues to attract significant wealth and the PRC economy finds itself needing more funds to boost growth or to address its debt challenges,&rdquo he said.
Alicia Garcia Herrero, chief economist for Asia-Pacific at Natixis SA, said that China has, despite a large trade surplus, seen net capital outflows in 2023 for the first time in four years, pointing to negative foreign direct investment (FDI) flows. Hawkish policy from the US Federal Reserve, she added, has stoked fixed-income outflows and depreciation pressure on the renminbi.
China&rsquo s data points to foreign firms operating in the country not only declining to reinvest their earnings but also &ndash for the first time &ndash becoming large net sellers of their existing investments to Chinese companies and repatriating the funds. FDI  outflows  exceeded  $100 billion in the first three quarters of 2023 and are likely to grow further based on  current  trends, analysts say.
&ldquo The recent moderation of the Fed&rsquo s tone is helping to revert depreciation pressure and should also help stem off the capital outflows,&rdquo said Herrero in presentation slides reviewed by Asia Times. She added that net capital outflows have persisted in China&rsquo s stock markets, fueled by decelerating economic growth, negative industrial profits and a real estate crisis.
Despite initially bullish expectations, Chinese stocks have been among the world&rsquo s worst performers in 2023, with a  year-to-date loss  of 9% for the MSCI China Index, following a 23.6% drop in 2022 and 22.8% in 2021. According to  Bloomberg data, Chinese stocks listed in Hong Kong, Shanghai, Shenzhen and New York have charted a $955 billion market capitalization loss this year.
As for complaints of  Singapore becoming increasingly unaffordable for locals, Nydia Ngiow, a managing director at BowerGroupAsia, a policy advisory firm,  said  &ldquo such sentiments did not stem from the recent influx of Chinese nationals. Singapore&rsquo s rapid economic development in the last few decades has thrived on business- and wealth-friendly policies, which inevitably resulted in increasing inequality.&rdquo

Singapore&rsquo s taxman wants the wealthy to pay more. Photo: iStock / Getty Images
Ngiow noted that Singapore government policies have taken a &ldquo leftward shift&rdquo in recent years, even as it has sought to court the wealthy. &ldquo Examples of these measures include increased taxes on high incomes and luxury goods, including luxury cars, and a proportionate increase in taxation based on the value of private property,&rdquo Ngiow said.
The city-state this year imposed a whopping 320% tax on high-end vehicles with an open market value higher than S$80,000 ($59,560), up from a previous rate of 220%. Authorities likewise raised the personal income tax rate for top-tier earners, targeting the top 1.2% of personal income taxpayers, in 2022 alongside upward adjustments to luxury property taxes.
&ldquo While the exodus of Chinese nationals to Singapore is no doubt a sticking point for the country, as it highlights the number of ultra-wealthy, this is unlikely to significantly strain ties between China and Singapore,&rdquo Ngiow added, noting that deep economic cooperation and large investment flows between the two countries &ldquo goes a lot deeper than disagreements over a few millionaires.&rdquo
Follow Nile Bowie on X, formerly Twitter, at @NileBowie
Tagged: Block 1Chinese Capital FlightChinese EmigresMonetary Authority of SingaporeSingaporeSingapore Money LaunderingSingapore Single Family OfficesSingapore VCCsSwitzerland of Asia
The inrush of Chinese money is being keenly felt in Singapore, regarded as the so-called &ldquo Switzerland of Asia&rdquo for its political neutrality and open banking facilities. High-net-worth individuals from mainland China and Hong Kong are believed to have contributed to record capital inflows into the city-state in the past two years.
That, in turn, has contributed to soaring property and rental prices that helped drive inflation to a 14-year high earlier this year. Meanwhile, anecdotes and images of &ldquo crazy rich&rdquo Chinese emigres flaunting their wealth in tough times have gone viral, with the outward displays of affluence rubbing many in Singapore the wrong way.
 
Indeed, Chinese capital inflows have become a politically sensitive issue, all the more so after local authorities arrested and charged 10 Chinese nationals in August for a range of crimes including money laundering linked to illicit proceeds from scams and illegal gambling.
Some S$2.8 billion (US$2 billion) in cash and other assets have so far been frozen or confiscated in the case. Among the accused are members of prestigious local golf clubs and donors to local charities who opted to emigrate and set up new businesses in Singapore.
One or more of those facing charges reportedly  have links  to single family offices set up by the ultra-rich to manage their money and investments and which previously were given tax incentives by the central bank.
This small Southeast Asian nation of 5.9 million has for decades provided banking and investment management services to wealthy individuals with the allure of low-income tax rates, zero levies on capital gains or inheritances, strong financial privacy laws  and generous incentives for multinational firms to establish corporate headquarters.
 

Wealthy mainland Chinese flaunt their lifestyles in a local Straits Times profile. Image: Twitter Screengrab / Straits Times
Geography and culture are also a draw for wealthy mainland Chinese looking for an exit strategy.  Around 70% of Singapore&rsquo s population is ethnic Chinese, with  Mandarin  serving as one of the city-state&rsquo s  widely spoken official languages. Popular provincial Chinese cuisines  have  also  proliferated as more mainland Chinese work and emigrate to Singapore.
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Join the Asia Times Community
- The Daily Report Start your day right with Asia Times' top stories
- AT Weekly Report A weekly roundup of Asia Times' most-read stories
 
 
OR
 
 
 
While Singapore&rsquo s government has said the recent arrests demonstrated its self-claimed zero-tolerance for crime &ndash authorities have initiated a review of anti-money laundering rules for single family offices &ndash the episode nonetheless raises &ldquo legitimate concerns whether the immigration regime is lax such that lawlessness is being &lsquo imported&rsquo into Singapore,&rdquo SMU&rsquo s Tan said.
National University of Singapore (NUS) political scientist Chong Ja Ian said the money laundering case involving Chinese nationals is &ldquo indicative of the tension between wanting to maintain banking secrecy and ease of business to attract wealth on one hand, and the need for transparency and effective regulation on the other.&rdquo He added: &ldquo It is difficult to have your cake and eat it too.&rdquo
Investment management firms have seized on a variable capital company (VCC) scheme launched in Singapore in 2020, similar to those renowned in offshore hubs like the Cayman Islands and Luxembourg  that  provide tax and legal shelter for hedge funds, venture capital and private equity firms, among others.  More than 1,000 VCCs have been  established  or re-domiciled  in Singapore this year.
 
Singapore  secured  a record S$22.5 billion ($16.8 billion) in fixed asset investment commitments in 2022, nearly double last year&rsquo s S$11.8 billion ($8.8 billion). The asset management industry, meanwhile,  oversaw  S$4.9 trillion ($3.6 trillion) in 2022, according to the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS),  the central bank,  with 76% sourced from overseas and 88% invested in overseas assets.Last year also saw an explosion in the number of family offices and single family offices managing the assets of the rich and sometimes famous. According to the MAS, the number of single family offices rose to 1,100 in 2022, up from just 400 in 2020.
The Boston Consulting Group estimates there are more than 800 multi-family offices in Singapore, compared to only 100 five years ago.
The boom in family offices raises questions about their upside for Singapore, said NUS&rsquo Chong. He said  family offices &ldquo tend to be light in terms of their personnel needs and often hire fund managers internationally. Moreover, if they are largely moving money around, this sort of portfolio investment tends not to directly benefit the local economy as much as foreign direct investment.&rdquo
Bloomberg,  Financial Times  and other international media outlets  have cited fund managers in Singapore saying that,  despite strong inflows of new money, family offices have largely  shied  from investing in capital markets, with accounts of wealthy newcomers instead spending lavishly on condominiums, luxury vehicles and golf club memberships.
 
Mainland Chinese were the  top foreign buyers  of private property in Singapore in 2022, according to property consultancy OrangeTee & Tie,  comprising  nearly one-quarter of the 425 recorded &ldquo luxury&rdquo home purchases, defined by values of at least S$5 million ($3.7 million).Singapore&rsquo s residential real estate prices  spiked  14% last year, according to data from real estate consultancy firm Knight Frank. 
To cool the market, authorities introduced in April an eyewatering 60% property tax for foreign buyers and even  higher levies imposed on Singaporeans and permanent residents who purchase  second  homes. Foreign buying  reportedly  accounted for 7% of all property transactions in the first quarter of this year, up from about 6% from 2017 to 2019.

Singapore housing prices are up and up. Image: Asia Times Files / AFP / Roslan Rahman
Demand from foreign buyers has since fallen to about 4% of total transactions so far in 2023. Residential property prices have since moderated from up 11.4 % year on year in the first quarter of 2023 to 4.4% by the third quarter,  according to  the MAS, which on November 27 said private rents should continue to fall as a large number of new units are slated  for completion.
In April, the MAS strongly  refuted  a Financial Times article claiming it had  tacitly directed  bankers and regulators to avoid discussing the origin of growing capital inflows. &ldquo We haven&rsquo t been told explicitly not to talk about [China] but there is a sense in the financial services industry that talking about it publicly will not be welcomed,&rdquo an unnamed executive  was quoted  saying  in the report.
 
Singapore has sought to avoid perceptions that it is capitalizing on China&rsquo s woes, with the central bank cautioning wealth managers against aggressively courting business from Hong Kong as the territory  faced heated  political turmoil in 2019  and lost waves of foreign businesses and executives due to perceived extreme Covid-19 lockdowns.More recently, Singaporean officials have denied any pressure from Beijing in connection with recent money laundering-related arrests of Chinese nationals.
&ldquo There has been some speculation circulating in news outlets &ndash internationally and domestically &ndash that this operation was carried out at the behest of China. This is completely untrue,&rdquo Josephine Teo, Singapore&rsquo s second minister for home affairs, told parliament in early October in reference to the August arrests, which included individuals wanted in China for scams and illegal online gambling.
The perception that Singapore has acted in response to Chinese pressure &ldquo makes for eye-catching headlines but fails to recognize Singapore&rsquo s acute sensitivity to its sovereignty being trampled on,&rdquo said SMU&rsquo s Tan. He  said  that while it is imperative to deal with illegal activities with a transboundary dimension, &ldquo Singapore will not be pushed or bullied into being a policeman for China.&rdquo
If Singapore comes to be seen as a  safe destination  to skirt Beijing&rsquo s efforts to limit capital  outflows, that could &ldquo introduce complications&rdquo in Singapore-China ties, said NUS&rsquo Chong. &ldquo It is a risk that Singapore has to manage if it continues to attract significant wealth and the PRC economy finds itself needing more funds to boost growth or to address its debt challenges,&rdquo he said.
 
Despite talk of pent-up consumer demand, China&rsquo s economy has not delivered the post-pandemic rebound many had forecasted. Growth in the world&rsquo s second-largest economy has instead sputtered while a widening interest rate gap with the United States has helped to push the renminbi to a 16-year low, making it one of Asia&rsquo s worst-performing currencies this year with a 6% decline  measured  against the US dollar.Alicia Garcia Herrero, chief economist for Asia-Pacific at Natixis SA, said that China has, despite a large trade surplus, seen net capital outflows in 2023 for the first time in four years, pointing to negative foreign direct investment (FDI) flows. Hawkish policy from the US Federal Reserve, she added, has stoked fixed-income outflows and depreciation pressure on the renminbi.
Sign up for one of our free newsletters
- The Daily Report Start your day right with Asia Times' top stories
- AT Weekly Report A weekly roundup of Asia Times' most-read stories
 
 
China&rsquo s data points to foreign firms operating in the country not only declining to reinvest their earnings but also &ndash for the first time &ndash becoming large net sellers of their existing investments to Chinese companies and repatriating the funds. FDI  outflows  exceeded  $100 billion in the first three quarters of 2023 and are likely to grow further based on  current  trends, analysts say.
&ldquo The recent moderation of the Fed&rsquo s tone is helping to revert depreciation pressure and should also help stem off the capital outflows,&rdquo said Herrero in presentation slides reviewed by Asia Times. She added that net capital outflows have persisted in China&rsquo s stock markets, fueled by decelerating economic growth, negative industrial profits and a real estate crisis.
Despite initially bullish expectations, Chinese stocks have been among the world&rsquo s worst performers in 2023, with a  year-to-date loss  of 9% for the MSCI China Index, following a 23.6% drop in 2022 and 22.8% in 2021. According to  Bloomberg data, Chinese stocks listed in Hong Kong, Shanghai, Shenzhen and New York have charted a $955 billion market capitalization loss this year.
As for complaints of  Singapore becoming increasingly unaffordable for locals, Nydia Ngiow, a managing director at BowerGroupAsia, a policy advisory firm,  said  &ldquo such sentiments did not stem from the recent influx of Chinese nationals. Singapore&rsquo s rapid economic development in the last few decades has thrived on business- and wealth-friendly policies, which inevitably resulted in increasing inequality.&rdquo

Singapore&rsquo s taxman wants the wealthy to pay more. Photo: iStock / Getty Images
Ngiow noted that Singapore government policies have taken a &ldquo leftward shift&rdquo in recent years, even as it has sought to court the wealthy. &ldquo Examples of these measures include increased taxes on high incomes and luxury goods, including luxury cars, and a proportionate increase in taxation based on the value of private property,&rdquo Ngiow said.
The city-state this year imposed a whopping 320% tax on high-end vehicles with an open market value higher than S$80,000 ($59,560), up from a previous rate of 220%. Authorities likewise raised the personal income tax rate for top-tier earners, targeting the top 1.2% of personal income taxpayers, in 2022 alongside upward adjustments to luxury property taxes.
&ldquo While the exodus of Chinese nationals to Singapore is no doubt a sticking point for the country, as it highlights the number of ultra-wealthy, this is unlikely to significantly strain ties between China and Singapore,&rdquo Ngiow added, noting that deep economic cooperation and large investment flows between the two countries &ldquo goes a lot deeper than disagreements over a few millionaires.&rdquo
Follow Nile Bowie on X, formerly Twitter, at @NileBowie
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https://www.todayonline.com/singapore/china-singapore-affirm-close-ties-lawrence-wong-beijing-2319696
 
chartiskao ( Date: 08-Dec-2023 15:43) Posted:
|
ocbc traded now at $12.63
&ldquo It should not surprise us if Singaporeans are concerned and perceive their city-state is becoming a playground for the rich and feeling increasingly priced out,&rdquo said Eugene Tan, a political analyst and law professor at Singapore Management University (SMU), told Asia Times. &ldquo Political pressure on the government to address perceived inequality is clearly there.&rdquo
https://www.channelnewsasia.com/singapore/china-singapore-ties-lawrence-wong-premier-li-qiang-3969006
 
chartiskao ( Date: 08-Dec-2023 15:34) Posted:
|
his crazy rich chinese will bargain hunt ocbc share if it continue to slide
https://asiatimes.com/2023/12/crazy-rich-chinese-making-headaches-for-singapore/
https://asiatimes.com/2023/12/crazy-rich-chinese-making-headaches-for-singapore/
chartiskao ( Date: 08-Dec-2023 15:24) Posted:
|
2 years before the multiple rate hikes by the global central bankers
https://www.cnbc.com/2020/07/30/shares-of-singapore-banks-fall-after-regulator-limits-dividend-payouts.html
https://www.cnbc.com/2020/07/30/shares-of-singapore-banks-fall-after-regulator-limits-dividend-payouts.html
chartiskao ( Date: 08-Dec-2023 15:20) Posted:
|
24 Nov 2023 &mdash Banking stocks fell minutes after the market opened. DBS : D05 -0.85% was down 0.5 per cent or S$0.15 to S$31.80, UOB : U11 -0.26% lost 0.4 per  ...
 
https://www.businesstimes.com.sg/companies-markets/singapore-shares-fall-fridays-open-banks-pull-back-sti-down-03
chartiskao ( Date: 08-Dec-2023 15:11) Posted:
|
after the worst time 2001 -the 911' s us terror attacked
This was followed by a merger between Great Eastern Holdings and Overseas Assurance Corporation in December 2000. In June 2004, Great Eastern Holdings became a substantially owned subsidiary of OCBC Bank, Singapore' s longest established local bank.
 
https://www.ocbc.com/assets/pdf/major%20regulatory/2004/voluntary%20offer%20for%20great%20eastern%20holdings%20limited%20and%20selective%20capital%20reduction/17052004%20offer%20document.pdf
 
and then we had a period of low rates money printing and QE globally after 2009 to 2019
chartiskao ( Date: 08-Dec-2023 15:07) Posted:
|
investing durig 1990 to 2004 is the worst of time and the best of time after the sg local banks merger
https://www.sharesmagazine.co.uk/news/shares/team-ethos-key-for-abrdn-asia-focus-plc-as-pioneer-hugh-young-retires
https://www.sharesmagazine.co.uk/news/shares/team-ethos-key-for-abrdn-asia-focus-plc-as-pioneer-hugh-young-retires
chartiskao ( Date: 08-Dec-2023 14:52) Posted:
|
when yield falls money started to buy local bank shares
https://www.straitstimes.com/business/companies-markets/singapore-shares-slip-sti-down-04
https://www.straitstimes.com/business/companies-markets/singapore-shares-slip-sti-down-04
chartiskao ( Date: 08-Dec-2023 14:50) Posted:
|
THE latest Singapore six-month Treasury bill (T-bill) is offering a cut-off yield of 3.74 per cent, according to auction results released on Thursday (Dec 7). This is down from the cut-off yield of 3.8 per cent offered in the previous six-month tranche of the T-bills, issued on Nov 28.21 hours ago
https://growbeansprout.com/t-bill-allotment-7-december-2023
chartiskao ( Date: 08-Dec-2023 14:47) Posted:
|
with US rates at record high of 5.5% after sucking out usd from asean
https://en.yna.co.kr/view/AEN20231208004251320
https://en.yna.co.kr/view/AEN20231208004251320
chartiskao ( Date: 08-Dec-2023 14:37) Posted:
|
When did OCBC stock split?
 
 
The stock split occured on August 3rd, 2005.
 
https://www.bankrate.com/banking/federal-reserve/history-of-federal-funds-rate/
 
https://www.ocbc.com/assets/pdf/media/2005/feb/22022005%20ocbc%20bank%20proposes%20a%20two_for_one%20stock%20spilt.pdf
chartiskao ( Date: 08-Dec-2023 14:33) Posted:
|
before aberdeen became a subtantial shareholder of ocbc in 2007
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aberdeen_Asset_Management
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aberdeen_Asset_Management
chartiskao ( Date: 08-Dec-2023 14:28) Posted:
|
https://www.investopedia.com/investing/behind-standard-aberdeen-merger/
chartiskao ( Date: 08-Dec-2023 14:26) Posted:
|
he  invested in highrates environement from 1980 to 2001(high rates) to2009 to 2019(super low rates environment) and then retired in super high rates environment from march 2022 to oct 2023
https://www.bankrate.com/banking/federal-reserve/history-of-federal-funds-rate/
https://portfolio-adviser.com/abrdn-asia-focus-manager-young-to-retire-at-the-end-of-2023/
chartiskao ( Date: 08-Dec-2023 14:22) Posted:
|
https://www.trustnet.com/news/13394286/abrdns-hugh-young-to-retire-at-the-end-of-2023
chartiskao ( Date: 08-Dec-2023 14:20) Posted:
|













