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Doing Business in Hong Kong

Hong Kong

Inside this issue

• Individual groups in the financial services sector thrive or falter, but Hong Kong’s importance has continued to grow

• The city has thrived by doing what China could have done but hasn’t - -

Content

Populist culture begins to take root

Despite all the changes, the city is noted for its can-do approach, reports Tom Mitchell

Charles Li: Man who finds himself at a ‘historic crosspoint’

The incoming chief executive of the exchange talks to Robert Cookson

Border crossing points: Busy frontier between two blurring worlds

Movements are mainly to, rather than from, China, writes Charles Lee

The city’s tycoons: After a brief battering, life improves for the city’s rich

A liquidity-driven recovery has restored fortunes, reports Robin Kwong

Macao raises its game again

But oversupply means there could be a bubble in the making, reports Justine Lau

Financial services: The city’s standing has continued to climb

But the roster of big names has been changing, reports Sundeep Tucker

Business education: HKUST is open to competition

Justine Lau looks at one of the city’s leading institutions in the field

David Webb: Tireless champion of shareholder’s rights

Charles Lee examines the campaigns of a one-man phenomenon

Guest column: Doing what China won’t

Hong Kong has opportunities to exploit when the mainland operates on market principles, writes Jake van der Kamp