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Hong Kong billionaire tycoons call for end to protests as unrest affects their profits

byCT Report
20/08/2019
in Uncategorized
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Hong Kong’s property tycoons are hurting, the share market is tanking and the tourism sector has taken a beating as the pro-democracy movement continues to strangle the city.

While the US-China trade war has fuelled some of the losses, weeks of violent protests have wreaked havoc for investor sentiment and caused huge reputational damage for the semi-autonomous territory as an economic powerhouse.

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As the protest movement enters its 11th week with no signs of slowing down, analysts are predicting the financial hub is barrelling towards recession.

Now the city’s ultra-rich are calling for the protests to end.

The net worth of the 10 wealthiest tycoons, who derive their fortune from Hong Kong-listed companies, has shed billions since the protests started in June, according to the Bloomberg Billionaire’s Index.

Hong Kong’s richest person, 91-year-old business magnate Li Ka-shing, has become the latest billionaire to join the chorus speaking out.

Mr Li, nicknamed ‘Superman’ in Hong Kong, took out full-page ads in most local newspapers, urging a halt to the unrest “in the name of love”.

It featured the Chinese word for “violence” with a red cross through it, flanked by slogans about loving China and loving Hong Kong.

The entrepreneur, who is worth approximately $39 billion, signed the ad with “from a Hong Kong resident, Li Ka-shing”.

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