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$140 Billion at Stake for H.K. Tycoons Backing Security Law

The nine richest people in Hong Kong have endorsed China’s security law. Their fortunes are worth a combined $140 billion.

$140 Billion at Stake for H.K. Tycoons Backing Security Law
A person wearing a protective mask waves a colonial-era Hong Kong flag at Victoria Park to commemorate the 31st anniversary of the Tiananmen Square crackdown in Hong Kong, China. (Photographer: Paul Yeung/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- After 12 months of political turmoil, a pandemic and the worst recession on record, Hong Kong’s richest people have emerged with their fortunes intact.

Now the billionaire class of real estate developers, taipans and conglomerate founders who dominate Hong Kong’s economy are lining up to support a controversial national security law, siding with the Chinese government despite widespread opposition from local residents and Western leaders.

The nine richest people with companies listed in the city have endorsed the bill, either personally -- as was the case with Li Ka-shing and Michael Kadoorie -- or through one of their businesses or relatives. Their fortunes are worth a combined $140 billion.

$140 Billion at Stake for H.K. Tycoons Backing Security Law

“Business leaders in Hong Kong have no choice if they do not relocate themselves and their businesses,” said Steve Tsang, director of the China Institute at SOAS University of London. “The passing of the decision on the national security law is a clear warning to them, and if they do not publicly support it, they know they risk being seen as opposing it.”

A developer association representing firms including Lee Shau Kee’s Henderson Land Development Co. and the Kwok family’s Sun Hung Kai Properties Ltd. said it backs the law because it will guarantee stability and prosperity. The families behind Swire Pacific Ltd., Galaxy Entertainment Group Ltd. and Jardine Matheson Holdings Ltd. have issued similar endorsements.

Critics have argued that Beijing’s plan to impose the security bill by side-stepping Hong Kong’s legislature will mark the end of the “one country, two systems” principle that has underpinned the city’s status as a global financial hub.

$140 Billion at Stake for H.K. Tycoons Backing Security Law

One of the law’s staunchest opponents is media tycoon Jimmy Lai, who has called out his fellow moguls for kowtowing to Beijing. Lai was arrested along with others earlier this year as part of a crackdown on pro-democracy figures who supported demonstrations that began last June.

While those protests kicked off one of the most turbulent 12 months in Hong Kong’s history, the collective fortunes of the city’s richest haven’t suffered. Since the unrest started, their net worth has actually climbed 0.7%, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. That compares with a slide of about 8% in the benchmark Hang Seng Index over the same period. The gauge closed little changed on Monday.

$140 Billion at Stake for H.K. Tycoons Backing Security Law

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