Instead of high-net-worth individuals, C-suite executives in China are increasingly using business jets, said Paul Desgrosseilliers, general manager at ExecuJet Haite General Aviation Services.
ExecuJet HaiteBEIJING — China's wealthy are increasingly looking for ways to move capital outside the mainland to pursue business opportunities, rather than just chasing investment returns, according to asset managers and consultants.
The company's active overseas clients rose by nearly 63% year on year to 3,244.
Overseas assets under management rose nearly 15% to $5.4 billion from a year earlier, while mainland China assets under management fell over 6% to $15.8 billion, according to Noah's quarterly earnings report.
"What we are hearing from them is that the fastest growth in terms of interest from Chinese clients [occurred] in the post-Covid [period to] early last year."
Persons:
Paul Desgrosseilliers, ExecuJet, there's, Ryota Kadogaki, Grant Pan, Noah Holdings, Noah, Kadogaki, Mu Chen, That's, Pan, ExecuJet Haite
Organizations:
General Aviation Services, Beijing Daxing, Monolith, Investors, Ministry of Commerce, CNBC, Noah Holdings, Beijing Daxing International
Locations:
China, Beijing, BEIJING, Japan, Mainland China, Singapore, Hong Kong, Southeast Asia, East, Africa, Asia Pacific