The Manila Times

Top bankers air concern on Hong Kong situation

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TOKYO: China’s crackdown in Hong Kong has left Japanese finance firms “very much afraid” and reconsider­ing whether to remain in the city, a senior banker said Monday in a rare public declaratio­n of concern from within the industry.

Yoshitaka Kitao, chief executive of financial conglomera­te SBI Holdings, which runs Japan’s largest online brokerage, told the Financial Times he was planning to pull his company’s operations out of the southern Chinese city, arguing that “without freedom, there is no financial business.”

Other Japanese companies, he told the newspaper, were thinking about doing the same but were less willing to say so openly.

“They are unlike me. I’m a very straightfo­rward guy. But all the others, in their bellies, they think they should move out or won’t invest more in Hong Kong,” Kitao said in an interview published on Monday.

Beijing is struggling to quash dissent in semi-autonomous Hong Kong after huge and sometimes violent pro-democracy demonstrat­ions in 2019.

It has imposed a broad national security law on the city that has criminalis­ed much opposition, and is planning to enact new rules vetting all political candidates for their “patriotism.”

Senior Chinese leaders have also called for “reform” of the city’s independen­t judiciary, a key component of Hong Kong’s status as a regional business hub.

Many internatio­nal business figures privately fret their companies could be caught in the crossfire as Beijing and multiple Western nations feud over China’s plans for Hong Kong.

But few have vocalised them so publicly as Kitao, whose company last year had a market capitalisa­tion of $5.9 billion.

In his interview with the newspaper, Kitao said businesses were now questionin­g whether it made sense to remain in Hong Kong — a city with notoriousl­y high rents — if the business landscape becomes little different from mainland China.

“If I want to do business in China, would rather have an office in

Beijing or Shanghai or somewhere,” he said.

He added he was looking at cities such as Shanghai — or rival Singapore — to move SBI’s 100-person Hong Kong operation to.

Kitao specifical­ly mentioned Beijing’s security law as a reason Hong Kong was now “not a good place for financial institutio­ns,” the report said.

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