Senin, 06 Desember 2021

Traders Dump Asean Stocks on Fears Omicron Will Hammer Region - Bloomberg

Emerging-market traders are taking the once-bitten, twice-shy approach with Southeast Asia and omicron, dumping shares from the region that was most impacted when the delta variant arrived.

The MSCI AC Asean Index has fallen about 4% since U.S. Thanksgiving -- when omicron first made its presence known in markets -- underperforming the near 2% decline in Latin American shares and tiny gain in Eastern European equities. The gauge of southeast Asian stocks slumped almost 7% in the two months after the delta variant was officially named at the end of May.

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2021-12-05 16:00:00Z
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Minggu, 05 Desember 2021

Macau 'junket king' Alvin Chau's life in the limelight goes bust after illegal gambling arrest - AsiaOne

With his signature slicked-back hair and well-tailored suits, Alvin Chau Cheok-wa looked more like a celebrity than a businessman as he basked in the limelight, often with his beautiful Malaysian-American mistress draped over his arm.

Last weekend, Chau, the boss of Macau's largest casino junket operator, made the headlines again, but this time in handcuffs.

The chief executive of Suncity Group was arrested over his alleged connection to an illegal cross-border gambling and money-laundering syndicate.

Macau's judiciary police on November 28 announced they had detained nine men and two women amid an investigation into an illegal gambling platform operated by a junket company for mainlanders.

Among them was a 47-year-old Macau businessman surnamed Chau - identified as the head of the syndicate - but police did not reveal his full name.

The arrest came more than a year after Chau produced a video denying rumours circulating online and in Macau that he was being investigated for sending employees to the mainland to take part in illegal gambling activities.

Now, Chau, the founder of the Suncity empire who stood down earlier this month as chairman of the Hong Kong-listed Suncity Group Holdings Ltd, is in pretrial detention in Macau's Coloane prison.

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Humble beginnings

Before his downfall, Chau's story was the archetypal rags-to-riches tale of a Macau-born native. Reportedly from a humble background, Chau entered the industry at just 20 years old, working to create a business from scratch that would earn him the informal title "junket king".

Such was the Suncity empire's importance to the city's gaming industry that every local casino had a VIP room devoted solely to the company's high roller guests.

During his climb to the top, Chau reportedly became a disciple of Macau triad boss Wan Kuok-koi, aka Broken Tooth Koi, in 1995. After Wan was imprisoned in 1999, it was believed Chau visited him often, deepening their personal relationship.

Wan would ultimately ask a friend to give Chau the HK$30 million (US$3.8 million) he needed to bankroll what would become the Suncity Group, launched in 2007.

"Before I was 30 years old, I was nothing. After 30 years old, I began to have some thoughts and goals. Like I said before, I am not a magnate," Chau said in an interview with the now-defunct Apple Daily newspaper in 2017.

Junket operators such as Suncity reach out to high rollers outside Macau, providing them with transport and accommodation arrangements as well as extending them lines of credit and other personalised services.

At their height in 2011, punters flown in by the city's junket businesses contributed as much as 73 per cent of Macau's overall gaming revenue. But that figure had declined to about 50 per cent before the pandemic hit last year.

As Macau's largest junket operator, Suncity is estimated to employ about 12,000 agents and control a 40 per cent market share.

Ben Lee, a gambling analyst and managing partner of iGamiX Management & Consulting, said Suncity's role in the city's casino industry was crucial, calling junkets a vital lifeline.

As Suncity's operations grew, Chau was also carving out a unique space for himself, Lee said.

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"He was a larger than life icon who brought glamour to a once murky industry segment, and was universally respected by all, including his competitors," he said.

But with his arrest, things are about to change.

"I think we will see most of the junkets disappear," Lee said.

"Consolidation was already happening, even before this, and the latest development will only accelerate that. We think only casual junkets from Southeast Asia will continue. However, that market is but a small fraction of the China volume."

Glenn McCartney, associate dean of the University of Macau's faculty of business administration, also agreed that "the role of Suncity has been very important" for the city's casino industry.

"They were part of the fabric of the gaming industry," he said.

But he added that the importance of junket operators had begun to decline around 2014. About a year later, the gambling hub's regulators began tightening up the rules on the companies.

While the mass market grew, earnings from premium players began declining, making up about 46 per cent of Macau's gross gaming revenue for 2019.

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Fingers pointed

Back in mid-2019, the first hints that all was not well with Suncity began to appear. State news agency Xinhua's Economic Information Daily ran a report pointing fingers at Chau, alleging that a Suncity online gambling platform operated by Chau in the Philippines and Cambodia had penetrated into the mainland.

The platform, which can be accessed through a smartphone app, reportedly transmitted live footage of casinos in the Philippines and Cambodia and employed more than a thousand telemarketers offering one-on-one 24-hour service to place bets on behalf of customers.

The voice functions supported not only Mandarin, but also Cantonese and Northeastern Mandarin, while the gambling chips could be settled in yuan.

The yearly betting amounts were reportedly worth more than a trillion yuan (US$156 billion), twice as much as the mainland's 2018 lottery revenue of 511.47 billion yuan. The report criticised the platforms for posing a great danger to the country's socio-economic order and financial security.

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Business diversification

Over the years, as it ventured overseas, Suncity also expanded into a wide range of businesses including finance, property, tourism, catering and entertainment.

In 2011, Chau established Sun Entertainment Culture in Hong Kong, which signed artists such as Canto-pop singers Andy Hui Chi-on and Wilfred Lau Ho-lung, as well as award-winning film director Derek Tsang Kwok-cheung.

The company produced local films, including The White Storm, Vulgaria and The Way We Dance.

"After some time, I thought of getting involved in the entertainment industry and productions, which might be profitable and help our branding in the long term, similar to the Emperor Entertainment Group," he once told Apple Daily.

According to Inside Asian Gaming, Suncity's travel business contributed RMB110 million (US$16.7 million), or more than half the group's revenue in 2020.

Its share in Tigre de Cristal, a resort in Russia, cost RMB42.4 million, while it earned RMB37.7 million from its property management arm in mainland China.

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Chau also served for a time as chairman of Macau Films & Television Productions and Culture Association. He told People's Daily last year that he had collaborated on the production of patriotic blockbusters such as Operation Red Sea and Operation Mekong.

Promotion for the two mainland-produced films on Suncity Group's Facebook page cited Sun Entertainment Culture as one of their investors.

But after Chau's arrest on Monday, Chinese media outlet Guancha published an article mentioning speculation that his investment in the blockbusters may have served as a way to launder his money.

The production company behind the two films, Bona Film Group, released a statement that same day, saying Sun Entertainment Culture "did not actually participate in the investment of the two films nor receive any investment return" as they had "failed to make payments on time".

'Wholeheartedly connected to the motherland'

Chau sought to display his patriotism in other ways as well, becoming a member of the 11th Guangdong provincial committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference in 2013.

In an interview with state-owned broadcaster CCTV last year, he talked about how he had established the Inspirational Youth Association in 2011.

In addition to nurturing promising young people in Macau and mainland China, the organisation also helped them explore opportunities in the Greater Bay Area.

"From having a few dozen employees in 2007, when we first started, to 4,500 employees today … at this stage, we have to foster the value of our brand and corporate responsibility," he said.

In the now-famous video uploaded by the Suncity Group in 2020, Chau also addressed accusations the company had bankrolled Hong Kong protesters, describing the allegations as "absurd and unreasonable".

"My company is deeply rooted in Macau, and wholeheartedly connected to the motherland," he said. "Why would I jeopardise my country?"

Responding to rumours that Suncity had engaged in unlawful gambling, he emphasised that the company "had completely abided by the law of Macau".

"We have neither had any colleagues stationed in nor participating in any gaming-related duties in mainland China. We have never participated in any underground fund transfers," he said.

"Our employees, funds, company and business are all entrenched in Macau and in other countries that can operate our business legally."

ALSO READ: Macau tycoon Alvin Chau wanted by mainland Chinese authorities over alleged gambling offences

Personal Life

Like many magnates and tycoons, details of Chau's personal life often became fodder for entertainment magazines. Married to Macau entrepreneur Heidi Chan, 40, with whom he has three children, Chau began to appear in paparazzi snapshots in 2014 with model and actress Mandy Lieu, 36.

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Born to an American father and Malaysian-Chinese mother, Lieu became a model at 17 and came to Hong Kong a year later.

Living in Britain now, Lieu admitted to the relationship in a 2020 interview with newspaper the Evening Standard, saying she had given birth to three daughters and a son fathered by Chau. The couple broke up in 2019.

"With the children, we are always going to be a family - he is the reasoning voice of the family, asking if they have done their homework, whereas I want to know how their sunflower seeds are doing," she said of Chau.

While Chau's arrest hogged the headlines over the past week, local media in Hong Kong also seized on reports that just three weeks earlier, on November 4, Lieu had mortgaged a Mid-Levels flat worth HK$120 million to Melco Resorts & Entertainment Ltd to clear debts for her former companion.

The company is a subsidiary of Melco International Development, which is chaired by Lawrence Ho Yau-lung, son of the late Stanley Ho.

In addition to being famous for his junket business and colourful private life, Chau was once dubbed "Wash Rice Wa" by local media, a nickname he never understood, he said.

The moniker came from City Japes, a 1986 Cantonese sitcom, as one of the characters with that nickname also had the word "Wa" in his full name.

"No one [I know] calls me by this name," he told Apple Daily in 2017.

By his telling, he was only personally called by that nickname once or twice - more than a decade ago - while the people around him now mostly addressed him as "Wa Gor" or "boss".

But Chau's arrest may have opened the door for that nickname to be resurrected, as netizens have noted, "washing rice" also means money laundering in Cantonese.

ALSO READ: 'How could a mistress talk about family and children?' Macau tycoon's Malaysian lover Mandy Lieu slammed at new columnist stint

This article was first published in South China Morning Post.

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2021-12-05 05:09:00Z
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Five dead after Myanmar security forces ram car into Yangon protest - media - Reuters

FILE PHOTO: Police stand on a road during an anti-coup protest in Mandalay, Myanmar, March 3, 2021. REUTERS/Stringer/File Photo

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Dec 5 (Reuters) - Five people were killed and at least 15 arrested after Myanmar security forces in a car rammed into an anti-coup protest on Sunday morning in Yangon, local news portal Myanmar Now reported.

Witnesses on the scene told Reuters dozens had been injured. Photos and videos on social media show a vehicle that crashed through the protesters and bodies lying on the road.

Another protest was held in Yangon in the afternoon despite the morning violence.

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Anti-military protests are continuing despite the killing of more than 1,300 people since the Feb. 1 coup. The scattered protests are often small groups voicing opposition to the overthrow of an elected government led by Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi and the return of military rule.

The opposition's shadow government said it was heartbroken to see peaceful protesters crashed and shot to death.

"We will strongly respond to the terrorist military who brutally, inhumanly killed the unarmed peaceful protesters," the National Unity Government's defence ministry said in a statement on social media after Sunday's attack.

In the incident, a "flash mob" protest in Yangon, Myanmar's largest city, was rammed minutes after it started, witnesses said.

"I got hit and fell down in front of a truck. A soldier beat me with his rifle but I defended and pushed him back. Then he immediately shot at me as I ran away in a zig-zag pattern. Fortunately, I escaped," a protester who asked not to be identified for security reasons told Reuters by phone.

A car occupied by soldiers hit the crowd from the back, two witnesses said, and followed the scattered protesters arresting and beating them. Some were seriously injured with head wounds and unconscious, according to the witnesses.

A spokesman for the ruling junta did not answer calls seeking comment on Sunday.

The military has said that protesters who have been killed instigated the violence. It says it staged the coup because a November election won by Suu Kyi's party was rigged. The election commission has dismissed the assertion.

Wars with ethnic minority insurgents in remote frontier regions in the north and east have intensified significantly since the coup, displacing tens of thousands of civilians, according to United Nations estimates.

Suu Kyi, 76, faces a dozen cases against her including incitement and violations of COVID-19 protocols.

She has rejected all the charges to date.

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Reporting by Reuters Staff; Editing by Kim Coghill and William Mallard

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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2021-12-05 08:20:00Z
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Dyson splits with Malaysia supplier, stoking concern over migrant worker treatment - CNA

UNITED STATES PROBE

US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) opened an investigation into ATA in April over unethical recruitment practices and poor working and living conditions, according to independent labour rights activist Andy Hall, who sought the inquiry. He showed Reuters a letter dated Apr 19 from the agency informing him of the investigation. CBP declined to comment.

Nepalese national Dhan Kumar Limbu, 32, said that people working with Hall contacted him in April as part of his investigation into ATA, and Limbu said he shared details about working and living conditions with them. Hall confirmed Limbu's account.

Limbu said that in June, ATA officials took him to a police station, where he was questioned about sharing information with activists, then beaten by police. He fled Malaysia and is now back in Nepal. Limbu told Reuters that he told Dyson's lawyers about the ATA working conditions in an interview on Oct 1.

Dyson did not identify the whistleblower by name, but said in a statement to Reuters last month: "We immediately commissioned an international law firm to undertake a full investigation and provided the whistleblower with support that enabled them to assist with the investigation." Dyson did not say which firm it had retained.

ATA also hired a law firm to review Limbu's claims and said in a statement last week that preliminary findings indicate "the allegations may be unjustified". The police have said they are investigating whether officers beat Limbu.

Employees said that ATA started to make some changes since the accusations came to light in May, when it first publicly denied the allegations. The company reimbursed some workers RM7,000 in July for what they paid labour brokers in their home countries, according to Limbu, other workers and payslips seen by Reuters.

ATA also stopped employing foreign workers without permits and closed a crowded dorm that had housed 60 people to a room, workers said.

Limbu and other employees Reuters interviewed said that Dyson should have stayed to ensure working and living conditions improved for migrant workers.

"My intention to share information was to improve conditions for the workers and get rest days. But now with Dyson's decision, people will lose jobs," Limbu said.

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2021-12-05 04:39:00Z
CBMifWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmNoYW5uZWxuZXdzYXNpYS5jb20vYnVzaW5lc3MvZHlzb24tc3BsaXRzLW1hbGF5c2lhLXN1cHBsaWVyLXN0b2tpbmctY29uY2Vybi1vdmVyLW1pZ3JhbnQtd29ya2VyLXRyZWF0bWVudC0yMzU5NDM20gEA

Sabtu, 04 Desember 2021

COVID-19 | Omicron: The 'viral Jason Bourne' that can 'overwhelm' the world by spring, says infectious disease specialist Dr Leong Hoe Nam - The Independent

Singapore — A well known infectious disease specialist in private practice predicts that the newly-discovered Omicron variant of the virus that causes Covid-19 is likely to “overwhelm the whole world” by the first half of next year, if not sooner.

Dr Leong Hoe Nam, of Mount Elizabeth Novena Hospital, told CNBC on Wednesday (Dec 1) that the new variant of the coronavirus responsible for the pandemic is extremely good at dodging immune systems.

Speaking to CNBC’s Street Signs Asia, Dr Leong said that Omicron can even be called “the viral Jason Bourne” as it does everything to evade immune systems by changing the virus’ spike proteins.

Pharmaceutical companies have already announced that they’re looking at new vaccines to target the variant specifically, but testing their efficacy against Omicron will take between three and six months at least.

“But frankly, Omicron will dominate and overwhelm the whole world in three to six months,” added Dr Leong.

He called the idea that a vaccine specifically made against Omicron “nice” but “not practical.” 

He explained why: “We won’t be able to rush out the vaccines in time and by the time the vaccines come, practically everyone will be infected [with] Omicron given this high infectious and transmissibility.”

The new variant had scientists on the alert last week because of the unusually large number of mutations it has, which could reduce the effectiveness of existing Covid vaccines.

South African scientists first reported the Omicron variant on Nov 25, and it’s now driving a surge of new infections for a fourth wave of the disease in that country.

Omicron is now known to be present in at least 24 countries, including Singapore.

Epidemiologist and WHO technical lead on COVID-19 Maria van Kerkhove said that Thursday, “We don’t know very much about this yet. What we do know is that this variant has a large number of mutations. And the concern is when you have so many mutations it can have an impact on how the virus behaves. This is one to watch, I would say we have concern.”

The variant has an “incredibly high amount of spike mutations suggest this could be of real concern,” echoed Dr Tom Peacock, a virologist at Imperial College London.

On the ground in South Africa, however, how seriously ill those infected with the Omicron variant will be won’t be known until “people get so sick that they need to go to hospital” which typically occurs “three, four weeks later,” Prof Salim Abdool Karim of the Africa Task Force for Coronavirus told the BBC.

So far, most of those known to be infected with the new variant in South Africa have only suffered mild symptoms.

“The feedback we’re getting from the ground is that there’s really no red flags – we’re not seeing anything dramatically different, what we’re seeing is what we are used to,” the professor added.

Experts are saying that the current vaccines can still provide a level of protection against the Omicron variant.

“I do think that our current vaccines will hold up to a certain extent, with this new variant,” Dr Syra Madad, a fellow at the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, told CNBC. “It may reduce vaccine effectiveness by a couple of notches, but that is yet to be seen.”

Dr Leong thinks that a three-dose vaccine regimen is likely to provide protection against severe Covid, but he underlined that the vaccination rates in many countries continue to be low.

Even if only 1 or 2 per cent of infections ends up in hospitals with severe disease, he said, this could still overwhelm healthcare systems. /TISG

Read also: COVID-19 | Omicron: Two imported cases in S’pore test ‘preliminarily positive’ amid border control, sparking questions how was this possible?

COVID-19 | Omicron: Two imported cases in S’pore test ‘preliminarily positive’ amid border control, sparking questions how was this possible?

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2021-12-04 04:02:48Z
1157033015

We Have to Live With Covid. Here's How We Get Our Lives Back - Bloomberg

Two years into the pandemic, the emergence of yet another Covid-19 variant has brought home the fact that the virus is here to stay. That means the world will need to find long-term strategies to co-exist with delta, omicron and the strains to come.

As governments reopen at varying paces, there are things individuals and companies can do to navigate a careful return to some kind of normalcy. Simple but permanent changes in how people live and work can limit the risks.

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2021-12-03 23:00:00Z
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Jumat, 03 Desember 2021

WHO chief scientist urges people not to panic over Omicron COVID-19 variant - CNA

WHO's emergencies director, Mike Ryan, said there was no evidence to support a change in vaccines to tailor them to Omicron.

"Right now, we have highly effective vaccines that are working. We need to focus on getting them more equitably distributed. We need to focus on getting people most at risk vaccinated," Ryan said at a social media event.

WHO spokesman Christian Lindmeier told a United Nations briefing in Geneva that vaccine makers should prepare for the likelihood of adjusting their products.

Ugur Sahin, CEO of Germany's BioNTech, which makes a COVID vaccine with Pfizer, told the Reuters Next conference the company should be able to adapt the shots relatively quickly.

Sahin also said current vaccines should continue to provide protection against severe disease, despite mutations.

"I believe in principle at a certain timepoint we will need a new vaccine against this new variant. The question is how urgent it needs to be available," Sahin said.

WORRYING GAPS IN VACCINATION

Australia became the latest country to report community transmission of the new variant, a day after it was found in five US states.

Almost 264 million people have been reported to be infected by the coronavirus since it was first detected in central China in late 2019 and 5.48 million people have died, according to a Reuters tally.

Vaccination rates vary from country to country but there are worrying gaps in poorer countries. Indonesia, the world's fourth most populous country and once Asia's COVID-19 epicentre, has fully inoculated only about 35per cent of its population.

In the United States, the Biden administration announced measures to guard against the virus spreading. From Monday, international air travellers arriving in the United States will have to have obtained a negative COVID-19 test within a day of travel.

"We're going to fight this variant with science and speed, not chaos and confusion," President Joe Biden said.

Fewer than 60 per cent of the US population have been fully vaccinated, one of the lowest rates among wealthy nations.

Aside from wreaking havoc in the travel industry, the clampdown has pounded financial markets and undermined major economies just as they were beginning to recover from the lockdowns triggered by Delta.

Bank of England policymaker Michael Saunders, who voted for an interest rate hike last month, said on Friday he wanted more information about Omicron before deciding how to vote this month.

"At present, given the new Omicron COVID variant has only been detected quite recently, there could be particular advantages in waiting to see more evidence on its possible effects on public health outcomes and hence on the economy," Saunders said in a speech.

Germany said it would bar the unvaccinated from all but essential businesses, and legislation to make vaccination mandatory would be drafted for early next year.

Several countries, including Britain and the United States, were bringing forward plans to offer booster shots, but, like travel bans, they are controversial.

Many scientists say the way to stop the virus spreading is to make sure poorer countries have access to vaccines, not to give blanket booster shots to people in richer countries.

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2021-12-03 16:35:55Z
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