http://business.theage.com.au/business/world-turns-disapproving-eyes-on-singapore-banquet-20090908-fg2n.html
The Age, 9 Sep 2009, Eric Ellis
World turns disapproving eyes on Singapore banquet
WERE every high school as wonderful as Singapore's United World College.
Each morning, a convoy of chauffeur-driven Mercedes, BMWs and SUVs
sweep up to the expansive campus, dropping well-shod students dangling
all manner of modish teenage bling; mobile phones, computers, designer
this and that. The sumptuous grounds are more suggestive of a five-star
resort than a secondary school.
With yearly fees of more than $40,000, UWC is where Singapore's well-heeled foreign residents send their kids. That's
the common or garden expat professionals on an Asian posting, as well
as Tay Za, regarded by Washington as bagman to the Burmese junta. Tay
Za's teenage boy Htet is dropped off in a chauffeur-driven Lamborghini,
as his father evades US sanctions.
Some teachers are disquieted by all this but Singapore seems to subscribe to a ''don't ask, don't tell'' policy on where money comes from. In recent years, Singapore has actively sought to become Asia's
Switzerland, the discreet depository of the super-rich, however they
made their money. That led to a boom in private banking, with an
attendant boom in property and high-end services for this monied elite,
including education.
While the vast majority of Singaporean depositors are squeaky-clean, as anywhere, some are not. The Burmese junta banks in Singapore and the money of some of North
Korea and Zimbabwe's potentates is widely thought to be salted away
here.
The big money comes from Indonesia, whose tycoons have regarded
Singapore as a refuge from volatility at home. The two countries have
no extradition treaty and there's good reason for it to remain that way. Merrill Lynch estimated a third of Singapore's 60,000-odd millionaires
were Indonesian, making the city-state Jakarta's affluent northern
suburb. Re-elected on an anti-corruption ticket, Jakarta's
Yudhoyono Government suspects a good few of its countrymen in Singapore
have salted away tarnished money there.
But while markets were roaring, no one really much cared.
Singapore's private client relationship managers (RMs) were pushing
high-margin exotic derivative products created by their investment
banks, and the rich got richer. The atmosphere was perhaps best
exemplified by the appearance of UBS executive director James Tulley,
known to friends as ''Tulley Tubby'', in Singapore Tatler magazine
boasting about his 30 pairs of spectacles and 100 pairs of shoes.
But the financial crisis changed everything. It devastated values,
banks and depositors, and Western governments sought to crack down on
tax havens and regimes reluctant to adequately disclose their financial
affairs. Earlier this year, Singapore was threatened with a blacklist
of financial shelters compiled by the G20. Germany's Angela Merkel,
Britain's Gordon Brown, France's Nicolas Sarkozy and the new US
president Barack Obama linked arms against international tax havens and
secretive financial regimes, seeking scalps to make up for their own
economies' failings.
Now the Europeans are pressing Singapore and other financial centres to
open their books. Just 3 per cent to 5 per cent of Singapore's private
banking clients are regarded as European, most of them thought to be
Russian. That's incidental in the private banking scene in Singapore
but the implications beyond Europe are acute.
What Singapore doesn't want is the same rules as the EU and the US. It
also doesn't want to be singled out among Asian financial centres if
Hong Kong doesn't face the same rules. But Singapore cherishes a
self-styled reputation as an exemplary international corporate citizen,
operating by globally accepted norms.
Complicating the picture is a spate of court actions in Singapore's
courts where the big Asian tycoons Singapore loves are at war with big
international banks it also covets over who's responsible for the
massive GFC trading losses in their private accounts. Several
cases involve ''accumulators'' which involve banks signing clients to a
long program of buying stocks, often bank stocks, at fixed discounted
prices. That was great when Citibank was trading at $90 and
the client bought shares at $45, but not much fun when Citi shares
slumped to under $10, but the contracted accumulators kept, well,
accumulating at $45. Banks claim caveat emptor, but no wonder clients
dub the contracts ''I kill you later''.
Private banking consultant Roman Scott of Calamander Capital says
private banks are in denial over the extent of the problem. And, he
says, Singapore faces a tricky dilemma. He likens Indonesia and
countries like it to diners in a restaurant where various regulators,
unfamiliar with the menu, look to the smaller European table and chorus
''We'll have what they're having.'' And, as it struggles to again
economically re-invent itself, Singapore is hoping everyone somehow is
well fed.
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more and more odd foreign aliens crawling all over the place of our island.
thanks to fucking PAP.
LOL wait till US sanction Singapore how
Originally posted by *=Optimus=*:LOL wait till US sanction Singapore how
hahaha.. then.. senile Lee will try to start war with US- which eventually seals his fate.
Originally posted by OHSheet:hahaha.. then.. senile Lee will try to start war with US- which eventually seals his fate.
you think he dare?
Originally posted by angel3070:you think he dare?
as i said. he is senile . so its possible.
i may be wrong, but Htet would have felt the same as us about his father's past actions which angered the US.
anyway, why bother about this article? almost all other countries have the same dealings as us, why not point our fingers at our neighbours to the more far flung ones like the Swiss?