PDA

View Full Version : China-Financial turmoil hits super-wealthy



Rudolph
10-30-2008, 07:37 AM
Financial turmoil hits super-wealthy (http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=3&art_id=nw20081030122600366C175312)
October 30 2008

Shanghai - The credit crunch and financial crisis have more than halved the combined wealth of China's richest people, Forbes magazine said on Thursday as it released its annual Chinese billionaires list.

The ranking illustrates how fortunes have risen and fallen over the past tumultuous year as the net worth of China's 40 richest people fell 57 percent to $52-billion from $120-billion in 2007, Forbes Asia said.

Coming out on top was Shanghai-based agricultural feed tycoon Liu Yongxin with a net worth of three billion dollars while 20 billionaires including paper recycling queen Yan Cheung, who was once ranked as China's richest person, have dropped off the list entirely.

2007's number one, property heiress Yang Huiyan, saw $14-billion wiped off of her fortune in part due to ill-timed acquisitions, Forbes said. She fell to number three on 2008's list with $2,22-billion.

Number two on the list, with $2,7-billion, is Huang Guangyu, founder of Gome, China's largest chain of consumer electronics stores. Huang, a native of south China's Guangdong province who also goes by the Cantonese name Wong Kwong Yu, moved up eight spots from last year.

Liu, 2008's number one, started building his fortune in 1982 when he and his three brothers used $120 in savings to start raising quails and chickens, the magazine said.

They split up the business in 1995 and are now China's only family of billionaires.

Liu moved to Shanghai, where his East Hope Group is one of China's biggest feed companies, the magazine said. He also owns aluminium smelters.

Among those who from last year's list who failed to return was Larry Yung, whose Citic Pacific lost up to $2-billion due to unauthorised currency bets.
- Sapa-AFP

2Sheds_Jackson
10-30-2008, 04:19 PM
A little OT here, but I heard a story about China on NPR yesterday - they said orders to Chinese toy factories are down 70% from last year and something like 8000 factories have closed. Labor costs are up, and the combination of declining orders and work going to other places (Malaysia, Africa etc.) have hit them pretty hard.

Flagg
10-31-2008, 09:49 PM
A little OT here, but I heard a story about China on NPR yesterday - they said orders to Chinese toy factories are down 70% from last year and something like 8000 factories have closed. Labor costs are up, and the combination of declining orders and work going to other places (Malaysia, Africa etc.) have hit them pretty hard.


Yup.....

While China chases the US, Japan, and Europe up the technological product and service food chain ladder, they are being chased by nations with similiar or even lower per capita GDPs.

Every nation needs to keep moving forward just to stand still.

A bit like Invasion of the Body Snatchers...you can't sleep or smile...otherwise they'll come for your profits.

I can't think of a name
10-31-2008, 11:23 PM
Problem is China's big populations. These people wont go back to living in the rice patties.

I have always felt that China's size, though an asset, is its biggest problem.

plato
10-31-2008, 11:34 PM
Problem is China's big populations. These people wont go back to living in the rice patties.

I have always felt that China's size, though an asset, is its biggest problem.
just another problem created by Chairman Mao.

I can't think of a name
10-31-2008, 11:37 PM
just another problem created by Chairman Mao.

Yep,

It was a policy of his to encourage reproduction so they could have a large population after a hypothetical bomb blast. During the time of the Civil War in the 40s the population was around 400M at the end of the Cultural Revolution in the mid 70s it was a billion.

I really think this is the biggest news of the Financial Crisis. China does not have the institutions to deal with this. In the next few years people will have a higher expectation of living standards then ever before there. However they wont have jobs and they will see that during the good times the only people who got rich were friends and members of the party.

The economic boom is what maintained the legitimacy of the CPC at this time in history. That is gone now. This younger generation of leaders are not Enlai, Xiaoping, or Mao. They did not fight to earn there position. It was events like the Long March or defeating the GMD (or Japanese if people still believe their version of history) that gave this first and second generation clout.