‘; var fr = document.getElementById(adID); setHash(fr, hash); fr.body = body; var doc = getFrameDocument(fr); doc.open(); doc.write(body); setTimeout(function() {closeDoc(getFrameDocument(document.getElementById(adID)))}, 2000); } function renderIJAd(holderID, adID, srcUrl, hash) { document.dcdAdsAA.push(holderID); setHash(document.getElementById(holderID), hash); document.write(” + ‘ript’); } function renderJAd(holderID, adID, srcUrl, hash) { document.dcdAdsAA.push(holderID); setHash(document.getElementById(holderID), hash); document.dcdAdsH.push(holderID); document.dcdAdsI.push(adID); document.dcdAdsU.push(srcUrl); } function er_showAd() { var regex = new RegExp(“externalReferrer=(.*?)(; |$)”, “gi”); var value = regex.exec(document.cookie); if (value value.length == 3) { var externalReferrer = value[1]; return (!FD.isInternalReferrer() || ((externalReferrer) (externalReferrer 0))); } return false; } function isHome() { var loc = “” + window.location; loc = loc.replace(“//”, “”); var tokens = loc.split(“/”); if (tokens.length == 1) { return true; } else if (tokens.length == 2) { if (tokens[1].trim().length == 0) { return true; } } return false; } function checkAds(checkStrings) { var cs = checkStrings.split(“,”); for (var i=0;i 0 cAd.innerHTML.indexOf(c)0) { document.dcdAdsAI.push(cAd.hash); cAd.style.display =’none’; } } } if (!ie) { for (var i=0;i 0 doc.body.innerHTML.indexOf(c)0) { document.dcdAdsAI.push(fr.hash); fr.style.display =’none’; } } } } } if (document.dcdAdsAI.length 0 || document.dcdAdsAG.length 0) { var pingServerParams = “i=”; var sep = “”; for (var i=0;i 0) { var pingServerUrl = “/action/pingServerAction?” + document.pingServerAdParams; var xmlHttp = null; try { xmlHttp = new XMLHttpRequest(); } catch(e) { try { xmlHttp = new ActiveXObject(“Microsoft.XMLHttp”); } catch(e) { xmlHttp = null; } } if (xmlHttp != null) { xmlHttp.open( “GET”, pingServerUrl, true); xmlHttp.send( null ); } } } function initAds(log) { for (var i=0;i 0) { doc.removeChild(doc.childNodes[0]); } doc.open(); var newBody = fr.body; newBody = newBody.replace(“;ord=”, “;ord=” + Math.floor(100000000*Math.random())); doc.write(newBody); document.dcdsAdsToClose.push(fr.id); } } else { var newSrc = fr.src; newSrc = newSrc.replace(“;ord=”, “;ord=” + Math.floor(100000000*Math.random())); fr.src = newSrc; } } } if (document.dcdsAdsToClose.length 0) { setTimeout(function() {closeOpenDocuments(document.dcdsAdsToClose)}, 500); } } }; var ie = isIE(); if(ie typeof String.prototype.trim !== ‘function’) { String.prototype.trim = function() { return this.replace(/^s+|s+$/g, ”); }; } document.dcdAdsH = new Array(); document.dcdAdsI = new Array(); document.dcdAdsU = new Array(); document.dcdAdsR = new Array(); document.dcdAdsEH = new Array(); document.dcdAdsE = new Array(); document.dcdAdsEC = new Array(); document.dcdAdsAA = new Array(); document.dcdAdsAI = new Array(); document.dcdAdsAG = new Array(); document.dcdAdsToClose = new Array(); document.igCount = 0; document.tCount = 0; var dcOrd = Math.floor(100000000*Math.random()); document.dcAdsCParams = “”; var savValue = getAdCookie(“sav”); if (savValue != null savValue.length 2) { document.dcAdsCParams = savValue + “;”; }
Business

PhillipCapital is expanding its presence in Australia. Photo: AFP
GLOBAL wealth management firms are keeping an eye on the influx of wealthy Asian investors into Australia under a new visa program just as the governments of Singapore and Canada are winding down their cash-for-residency programs.
PhillipCapital, a Singapore-based financial services group, is expanding its presence in Australia partly because of the investor program, which is expected to inject $3.5 billion a year into the local economy.
The significant investor program started in November for individuals who invest $5 million or more in Australian assets for at least four years. Successful applicants do not need to pass the usual tests for skills and language.
PhillipCapital’s Australian chief, Jonathan Buckley, said he expected to double the size of the group’s Australian-based private wealth team to 120 advisers within 12 months. The firm’s network of offices in Asia was well positioned to serve new investors, he said.
”We have the infrastructure in China, and indeed in India, that can look after the interest to reside and invest in Australia,” he said.
PhillipCapital entered the Australian market last year through the acquisition of brokerages Intersuisse and the Austock Group.
”It is quite fortuitous that with the tightening up and closure [of investor programs] in Singapore and Canada, the UK and Australia are introducing this new scheme,” Mr Buckley said.
The chairman of PhillipCapital, Michael Wong, who is in Australia to launch the rebranded group, said his company was experienced in tapping wealthy immigrants after benefiting from the Singaporean government’s successful visa-waiver program.
Indeed he said the significant demand for the Singapore visa program ultimately let to its demise.
”The program was so successful that they raised it from $5 million to $10 million,” he said.
”In spite of that, there was still strong interest. Then they closed it down.”
Mr Wong, who oversees PhillipCapital’s operations in 16 countries, said Chinese millionaires wanted to move to places such as Singapore and Australia for education as well as safety reasons.
”They want their children to come for education [in the] English language,” he said. ”The second reason is you want to purchase an insurance policy [for protection against political instability].”
Global fund managers such as Aberdeen Asset Management, Morgan Stanley Wealth Management and major Chinese banks in Australia are looking to attract investment from cashed-up nations.
Executive Style
Five clever things we love
The first instalment of our monthly series of new gadgets includes an iPhone projector and a DIY gin-making kit.
Management: How to impress the super CEOs

Business leaders spill the beans on what it takes to work for them.
Pleasure giving: What to buy her for Valentine’s Day

It doesn’t hurt to ignore your partner if they tell you to forget about it.
Management: The top 10 bosses from hell

The very worst bosses from the silver screen and TV.
Featured advertisers
Special offers Powered by Mozo
Sponsored links
Advertisement
Advertisement
Business
What to buy her for Valentine’s Day
- Smh.com.au
- Snap back into work mode
- 10 tips for financial fitness
- Ask our small biz experts
Motoring
Got a Drive Car of the Year question? Facebook, today 12pm.
- Drive.com.au
- Car reviews: Head to Head – Renault Megane v Ford Focus
- Over 500 car reviews a year
- Cars for sale on Drive.com.au
The Vine
Star Wars: You’re Doing It Wrong.
Dating
Chat To Women Right Now!
Weather
Spring has sprung! Check our forecast to plan your weekend.
Compare and Save
Skip to:
Check out today’s best deals
0% Balance Transfer
Transfer credit card balances at 0% p.a. for 6 months
Hot Rates!
Re-finance your mortgage with comparison rates from 5.39%
Time to save again?
Compare top savings accounts. Earn up to 5.00%
$100 Cash Back
Exclusive $100 CashBack on Optus plans with selected phones
iPhone 5 Plans
Updated prices on iPhone 5 now compared
- SMH Home
- NSW
- National
- Environment
- Opinion
- Business
- Technology
- Digital Life
- Entertainment
- Life Style
- Travel
- Cars
- Exec Style
- Sport
- Weather
Brokers target growth in wealthy visas











Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét