logo
Hong Kong billionaire targeted with baseless mansion sale claims

Hong Kong billionaire targeted with baseless mansion sale claims

AFP2 days ago
"Li Ka-shing is selling his old mansion worth HKD 5 billion ($637 million) in a complete withdrawal from Hong Kong!" reads an X post in simplified Chinese posted on July 28, 2025.
It also shares a screenshot of a house's main gate along with the address 79 Deep Water Bay Road -- home of the Hong Kong billionaire -- on the website of real estate agency Centaline Property.
Image
Screenshot of the false post on X taken on August 13, 2025, with a red X added by AFP
Similar posts also surfaced in Douyin, RedNote, Facebook, Threads and Reddit after Beijing stepped up scrutiny on Li's CK Hutchison over a deal involving the strategic Panama Canal.
The firm in March proposed the sale of its global ports business -- including operations in the vital Central American waterway -- to a US-led consortium.
The deal was seen as a political win for US President Donald Trump, who had vowed to "take back" the Panama Canal from alleged Chinese control (archived link).
China has warned of legal consequences should parties proceed without clearance from Beijing, and CK Hutchison said in July it was looking to invite a Chinese "major strategic investor" to join discussions (archived link).
But a spokesperson for Centaline told AFP on August 13, 2025 that the circulating screenshot only shows an introduction to the house, and is "not related to selling or leasing".
She went on to say the claim that the house had been listed for sale on the website is "not true and is entirely fabricated".
Keyword searches led to the house's page on the company's website, and it does not include an asking price as claimed in the false post (archived link).
Image
Screenshot of Centaline webpage, taken on August 14, 2025
The search results also directed to the property pages in other real estate platforms Spacious, Midland and Ricacorp, but none of them included any official announcement of the home's sale (archived here, here and here).
Victor Li, the billionaire's eldest son, denied that his family home was being sold and described the online speculation as "fake".
"We have never intended to sell the property at 79 Deep Water Bay Road. Certain online reports and posts on social media regarding the sale of the property at 79 Deep Water Bay Road are completely fabricated and unfounded," he said in a statement emailed by CK Asset -- CK Hutchison's sister company -- to AFP on August 4, 2025.
Victor took over as chairman of CK Hutchison and CK Asset after his father retired as chairman of both companies in March 2018 (archived here, here, here and here).
AFP has previously debunked misinformation about Li Ka-shing here and here.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Is anybody fighting back in this trade war?
Is anybody fighting back in this trade war?

Fashion Network

time19 hours ago

  • Fashion Network

Is anybody fighting back in this trade war?

By no means does the firm anticipate zero harm. Business confidence is down but not collapsing. Capital spending will be constrained. And while chances of recession are still high, a better outcome remains very plausible. This sort of guarded optimism — or qualified pessimism — is a break from the dark warnings. Christine Lagarde, head of the European Central Bank, told leaders to prepare for a worst-case scenario in which an antagonistic US drags the world into destructive economic conflict. The prime minister of Singapore, a city-state that thrived during the heyday of free trade, couldn't hide his dismay: Tariffs aren't the actions of friends, Lawrence Wong noted. His Canadian counterpart, Mark Carney, declared that relations with the US would be changed forever. Chinese President Xi Jinping has studiously matched American moves but also toned down his rhetoric and actions when appropriate. Washington and Beijing this week extended a pause on higher tariffs for 90 days, the latest in a series of suspensions. India, which has been the subject of some bullish projections as China's economy has slowed, is one of the few economies of significance that hasn't cut a deal with Trump. But Prime Minister Narendra Modi also hasn't gone measure for measure or shown a desire to get even with American businesses. Yes, there has been indignity and hurt feelings. The governor of the Reserve Bank of India dismissed Trump's claim that commerce was dead there. He touted India's contribution to global growth — about 18% compared to around 11% for the US — and insisted the local economy was doing well. This is in the ballpark, based on IMF projections. It also misses the point that in pure size, America dwarfs India. Brazil, a comer that struggles to make good on its potential, is also refusing to bend. President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva loathes dependence on the US and wants to be treated as an equal. But Trump doesn't like a court case against Lula's predecessor for allegedly plotting a coup. Brazil is trying to develop an alternative to the dollar and places great store in commercial ties to the BRICS group of emerging economies. Many of those nations, and aspiring members of the bloc, have cut deals with Trump, or are likely to do so. Brazil will come to some arrangement. So has Trump got away with it? His aides reckoned that access to the American market is too lucrative to pass up, and they may have been right. It would also be naive to conclude there won't be any cost. The global economy has slowed but hasn't crashed, foreigners still purchase US Treasuries and it's a safe bet that the greenback will be at the centre of the financial system for years. But the nations humiliated won't forget this experience. Asia's economies will only get bigger and the siren call of greater integration with China will get louder. Trump's efforts to destroy the existing order may yet prove an own goal. Just not this year. Clayton, who became the top economic official at the State Department, believed that robust trade among the shattered nations of Western Europe was as important as physical rebuilding. The economic dislocation wrought by the conflagration had been underestimated; capitalism could revive the continent and prevent the political implosion of key countries. According to Benn Steil's book The Marshall Plan: Dawn of the Cold War, Clayton insisted that the US 'must run this show.' Trump's team brag about reconfiguring the system that grew from the ideals of the post-war era. The hubris may ultimately prove misplaced.

Sweden: Deadly shooting breaks out near mosque
Sweden: Deadly shooting breaks out near mosque

LeMonde

timea day ago

  • LeMonde

Sweden: Deadly shooting breaks out near mosque

One person was killed and another wounded on Friday, August 15, in a shooting near a mosque in southern Sweden, an attack police said they believed was linked to feuding organised crime gangs. Local media quoted witnesses as saying at least one person was shot as he left the mosque in the town of Örebro, about 200 kilometres west of Stockholm. The shooting occurred as people were leaving the mosque after Friday prayers, sparking panic as people ran from the scene, local media reported. Police said in a statement that a man "around the age of 25 died as a result of the wounds he suffered." The condition of the second person was not disclosed. Police provided no details about the deceased's identity or the circumstances of the shooting, and urged the public to stay away from the scene as their search for the shooter continued several hours after the incident. "We are currently actively pursuing the perpetrator or perpetrators," police spokesman Anders Dahlman told Agence France-Presse (AFP). "We are interviewing witnesses and carrying out our technical investigation," he said. Police said initially they had opened a preliminary investigation into attempted murder, which was changed to murder after the man's death. Organised crime connection In a statement, police said they believed the incident was linked to Sweden's "criminal network milieu." Police spokesman Lars Hedelin told the daily newspaper Aftonbladet that the shooting was likely an "isolated incident," and not directed at the mosque itself. The Scandinavian country, once known for its low crime rates, has struggled for years to rein in organised crime. Criminal networks are involved in drug and arms trafficking, as well as welfare fraud, with regular shootings and bombings plaguing the country in recent years. Police say the leaders of these criminal networks increasingly operate from abroad. They orchestrate murders and attacks via social media, often recruiting young children under the age of criminal responsibility to carry out the attacks. According to the global database Statista, Sweden had the third-highest number of homicides involving firearms per 100,000 inhabitants in Europe in 2022, behind Montenegro and Albania. Data from Sweden's National Council for Crime Prevention show that while shootings have declined since the peak year 2022, the number of explosions has increased. The town of Örebro was the scene of a school shooting in February, in which 11 people were killed, including the perpetrator.

Trump tariffs a stone in the shoe of 'made in USA' cowboy boots
Trump tariffs a stone in the shoe of 'made in USA' cowboy boots

Fashion Network

timea day ago

  • Fashion Network

Trump tariffs a stone in the shoe of 'made in USA' cowboy boots

The manufacture of iconic "made in the USA" cowboy boots is set to suffer from President Donald Trump 's 30% tariffs on South African exports that came into force in August. Texas's most renowned makers of the southern US fashion staple source the ostrich leather they require exclusively from the small South African town of Oudtshoorn, 400 kilometres (250 miles) east of Cape Town. Known as the world's "ostrich capital", Oudtshoorn is nestled in the semi-arid Little Karoo valley just inland from the southern coast and is home to a few hundred thousand people and about as many of the giant flightless birds. "We just don't know how bad the impact will be, but positive it wouldn't be," said ostrich farmer Laubscher Coetzee of the tariffs that kicked in after South Africa appeared unable to negotiate a new trade deal with Trump. More than half of the global supply of ostrich-derived products -- from feathers to leather and meat -- comes from nearly 200 farmers around Oudtshoorn who are joined in the Cape Karoo International (CKI) group, said its managing director Francois de Wet. South Africa as a whole supplies about 70% of the world's production, he said. Luxury handbag manufacturers in France and Italy are among the CKI's main clients. It also ships 20% of its ostrich leather to top Texas bootmakers such as Lucchese, Justin and Rios of Mercedes, whose boots are sold at several hundreds of dollars a pair. Ostrich is "an extremely important leather in our industry", Ryan Vaughan, CEO of the Rios of Mercedes manufacturer, told AFP. "It's very resilient, it forms to the foot," he said, wearing a typical cowboy hat. Coming from "a long line of cattle ranchers", his family brand was born in Texas in 1853 and employs 250 people. The tariffs "would make a dramatic impact in our business and in the western industry," he said, "because it's not just us that build a lot of cowboy boots out of ostrich leather". It is also the case of Tony Lama, an El Paso bootmaker supplied by CKI that has given a pair to every recent Republican president. Donald Trump received cowboy boots emblazoned with "MAGA" made out of "American alligator" skin, according to a press release. De Wet from the CKI said he believed the South African supply of ostrich leather to the US manufacturers did not run counter to a push by the Trump administration for production to be brought home. The United States did not have enough ostriches to provide the required leather, he said. "We export the raw material, the ostrich leather. They can't produce it from local ostriches in the US. They don't have them," he told AFP. "They do all the value-adding in the United States," he said. "So therefore, in terms of the pure definition of what the Trump administration would like to see, in this case, we do it already." The soft skins, recognisable by spots left by the large ostrich feathers, are currently sold to American manufacturers for around $20 a square foot. "We exported more than the usual volume of ostrich leather to the US in the past two-three months, so we have a little bit of a buffer," said de Wet. "For the moment we don't expect any layoffs in the short term," he said. But "in the long term, if we have to pick up the full tariff, it will definitely... cause a shrinkage of our business." The consumer could also not be expected to pay an extra 30% for the already pricey boots, he said. "So the tariff will have to be split between the exporter... and the importer, and preferably also a part paid by the end consumer." It is the unique climate of the Little Karoo, which gets less than 400 millimetres (nearly 16 inches) of rain a year, that makes it ideal for ostrich rearing, said Coetzee, a fourth-generation Oudtshoorn farmer. "That is the reason the ostrich industry is still here 200 years after (it started)," he said. His great-grandfather built the family home in 1896, when the price of ostrich feathers rivalled that of gold because of their value to the women's fashion industry. The extravagant "ostrich palaces" of the time are a reminder of the industry's previous major crisis, when the market collapsed in the early 1900s as the arrival of the low-roofed motor car ended the fashion for high-feathered hats. Copyright © 2025 AFP. All rights reserved. All information displayed in this section (dispatches, photographs, logos) are protected by intellectual property rights owned by Agence France-Presse. As a consequence you may not copy, reproduce, modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any of the contents of this section without the prior written consent of Agence France-Presses.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store