Singapore family office of rich Chinese hit by $55m fraud scandal

tripleme

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SINGAPORE -- The head of a Chinese family office in Singapore has accused former employees of fraud in a multimillion-dollar case, further tarnishing the reputation of the financial hub's wealth management sector after it was dented by a recent massive money laundering bust.

Zhong Renhai, an "ultra-high net worth Chinese businessman," his Panda Enterprise single family office -- a corporate structure used by the wealthy to manage their own and their relatives' assets -- and Lee Fung International, another company under him, alleged that 74 million Singapore dollars ($55.5 million) had been "misappropriated" from LFI and Panda by his locally based staff, a judgment from Singapore's High Court states.

https://asia.nikkei.com/Business/Fi...fice-of-rich-Chinese-hit-by-55m-fraud-scandal
 

eeLoyH

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Ownself hire people who are not trustworthy ownself fraud ownself then blame the system.

can they out who are the people they hired and if they are locals anot? If they are name will probably be published big big in msm

I think system is not at fault when they hire dishonest people
 

GarnetDragon

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money-burn.gif
 

dezzo69

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haha finally they come in here to be fleeced by us... its always been one way traffic for our companies to go over there and be fleeced... time for payback...

i think you shouldn't read too much into this article. it could be a deflection article to lay the blame on the 4 unnamed "singaporean" employees instead of the owner.

it could be a case of this company found to be doing laundry service and now the boss finding ways to not go jail by fledging innocence.
 

xdivider

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should be cannot see light money so no scared they chase them........
 

Laneige

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Ownself hire people who are not trustworthy ownself fraud ownself then blame the system.

can they out who are the people they hired and if they are locals anot? If they are name will probably be published big big in msm

I think system is not at fault when they hire dishonest people

Then the system only knows how to earn money but don’t know how to deterrent and to check on the systems that’s been in place so far???

This is a lot of money
Want to be financial hub n let ppl lose so much money is ok???

Then with more foreigners in our system then how safe can our sys be
 

johnsonheng

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Ownself hire people who are not trustworthy ownself fraud ownself then blame the system.

can they out who are the people they hired and if they are locals anot? If they are name will probably be published big big in msm

I think system is not at fault when they hire dishonest people
Locally based staff
 

johnsonheng

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i think you shouldn't read too much into this article. it could be a deflection article to lay the blame on the 4 unnamed "singaporean" employees instead of the owner.

it could be a case of this company found to be doing laundry service and now the boss finding ways to not go jail by fledging innocence.
It said locally base staff . Mean it hire from China and base in Singapore
 

jtsh55

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SINGAPORE -- The head of a Chinese family office in Singapore has accused former employees of fraud in a multimillion-dollar case, further tarnishing the reputation of the financial hub's wealth management sector after it was dented by a recent massive money laundering bust.

Zhong Renhai, an "ultra-high net worth Chinese businessman," his Panda Enterprise single family office -- a corporate structure used by the wealthy to manage their own and their relatives' assets -- and Lee Fung International, another company under him, alleged that 74 million Singapore dollars ($55.5 million) had been "misappropriated" from LFI and Panda by his locally based staff, a judgment from Singapore's High Court states.

It showed that four ex-employees of LFI -- who Nikkei Asia understands to all be Singaporeans -- along with an entity in the British Virgin Islands controlled by the four, were bound to a directive last week halting the movement of assets globally, indicating that the court has found sufficient evidence for their assets to need freezing.

"With regard to the [worldwide freezing order], I find that it should remain against all the defendants," the judge of the civil case said in the document. "The claimants have shown a good arguable case."

According to the document, the Chinese businessman discovered the situation in December 2023, which led to the removal of the four by January last year. External forensic accountants later found that SG$74 million had been siphoned from Zhong's accounts.

Among other fraudulent actions cited, three of the defendants were alleged to have taken more pay than they should have from 2019 to 2022. Over the four years, they were shown to have been overpaid by SG$2.93 million, SG$2.67 million and SG$2.76 million, respectively.

"This egregious dishonesty was deliberately done to deceive Zhong," records said.

The records also show that one of the four allegedly fabricated documents to embezzle funds belonging to Zhong to the amount of US$25 million using the Virgin Islands-registered company.

In defense against Zhong's allegations, the former employees argued that one of them had the mandate to decide their salary and bonuses, which Zhong denied, according to the court judgment.

The four had earlier applied to set aside the court's order freezing their assets, alleging "abuse of process" by Zhong, but failed in their attempt.

Nikkei understands that a significant portion of the alleged fraud occurred during the COVID-19 pandemic when the Chinese businessman was unable to be in Singapore.

"The family office staff went rogue," a source close to the case told Nikkei Asia on condition of anonymity. "They were able to exploit the lack of systems and checks."

Zhong's case is the latest known dent in the city-state's reputation as a regional financial hub. The tiny Southeast Asian island nation has in recent years drawn more single family offices, with their number passing 2,000 at the end of 2024, up from 1,400 recorded a year earlier.

Last year, 10 individuals originally from China who obtained wealth linked to activities such as illegal gambling were convicted for their roles in a SG$3 billion money laundering scandal that gripped international attention. Six single-family office funds that received government tax breaks were associated with the criminals.

As private asset managers for select groups of related individuals, single family offices in Singapore do not need a license to conduct their activities in the way mainstream commercial banks, for example, need the relevant permits to operate as regulated financial institutions.

The Monetary Authority of Singapore, the national financial regulator, has been tightening oversight on the inflow of foreign private wealth into the country following the SG$3 billion money-laundering scandal.

Last year, the MAS enlisted the help of professional services firms such as accounting giant EY to conduct detailed vetting of high net-worth individuals looking to park assets in the country via family offices.

The regulator also wants these wealth management vehicles to open and keep accounts with MAS-regulated banks, as well as to notify authorities when they start operations in Singapore.

Some industry observers view the structure of single family offices as opaque and therefore more prone to abuse by insiders, although Loh Kia Meng, Senior Partner at law firm Dentons Rodyk, noted that even in the highly regulated area of banks in Singapore, cases of wrongdoing have arisen from time to time.

"You can't have 100% enforcement -- [even] if you look over the shoulder of each single family office," Loh told Nikkei. "Every system has gaps, and if people want to exploit the gaps, they will."
 

chongquan82

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It showed that four ex-employees of LFI -- who Nikkei Asia understands to all be Singaporeans

Sinkies commit more crimes

😅😅😅
 

jtsh55

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It said locally base staff . Mean it hire from China and base in Singapore
The news said all 4 employees were Singaporeans.
It showed that four ex-employees of LFI -- who Nikkei Asia understands to all be Singaporeans -- along with an entity in the British Virgin Islands controlled by the four, were bound to a directive last week halting the movement of assets globally, indicating that the court has found sufficient evidence for their assets to need freezing.
 

boredom2012

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Someone did say that family office will help in providing jobs to sinkies. Where is the job?

Family offices have created good jobs in Singapore, both directly, when you hire your investment professionals locally, and indirectly, when you engage the services provided by our private banks, fund managers, as well as legal and tax firms

https://www.mas.gov.sg/news/speeche...n-our-flourishing-wealth-management-landscape

https://citywire.com/asia/news/single-family-offices-in-singapore-hire-2200-locals/a2459199
 

Spike

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Someone did say that family office will help in providing jobs to sinkies. Where is the job?

Family offices have created good jobs in Singapore, both directly, when you hire your investment professionals locally, and indirectly, when you engage the services provided by our private banks, fund managers, as well as legal and tax firms

https://www.mas.gov.sg/news/speeche...n-our-flourishing-wealth-management-landscape

https://citywire.com/asia/news/single-family-offices-in-singapore-hire-2200-locals/a2459199
Standard regulatory implementation is that the new requirements apply to NEW family offices.. not existing ones.
 
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