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Hong Kong protest

As Tear Gas Filled Hong Kong’s Streets, the Ultra-Rich Indulged in Art and Wine

By
Katya Kazakina
Katya Kazakina
,
Venus Feng
Venus Feng
, and
Bloomberg
Bloomberg
Down Arrow Button Icon
By
Katya Kazakina
Katya Kazakina
,
Venus Feng
Venus Feng
, and
Bloomberg
Bloomberg
Down Arrow Button Icon
October 8, 2019, 9:31 AM ET

Inside, the rich spent millions on art and fine wine. Outside, tear gas filled the streets, as an anxious Hong Kong was again engulfed by protests.

Those two scenes—the first, at an art auction inside the city’s modernistic convention center, the second, in the neon-lit roads of the nearby Wan Chai district—seemed to capture the dissonance that has become the new normal for Hong Kong.

Week after week, as protesters have clashed with police, the city’s wealthy have largely carried on. While property values and stock prices have dipped, the 10 richest tycoons who derive their fortunes from Hong Kong are still worth $197 billion, just 4% less than when the protests started in mid-June, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.

Judging by the turnout at the five-day auction by Sotheby’s—and the prices art and wine have commanded—elites from Hong Kong and the rest of Asia are as keen as ever to open their pocketbooks.

The highlight of Sunday’s contemporary art auction was a new world record for Japanese artist Yoshitomo Nara, whose painting of a cute but menacing cartoon girl—“Knife Behind Back”—sold for $24.9 million. On Saturday, Sotheby’s auctioned a canvas by Chinese emigre artist Sanyu for $25.2 million, with four bidders pushing the painting of a nude female above its $19 million target.

In other Hong Kong news, Yoshitomo Nara's "Knife Behind Back" sold for US$24.9 million at Sotheby’s this weekend. I'd like a print, please. https://t.co/654JE1f2tF pic.twitter.com/ybJPVFXYeT

— Kate Woodsome (@kwoodsome) October 7, 2019

The event includes 20 live auctions that are expected to fetch more than $336 million. The auction hall for Chinese antiques was packed on Tuesday as a rare pouch-shaped glass vase from the Qing dynasty sold for $22.95 million. Some buyers were also bidding by phone or sending representatives on their behalf.

The contrast with chaos on the streets in recent days—in some cases just a short walk from the convention center—was striking. In Wan Chai on Sunday, police fired tear gas at demonstrators who had gathered in a park and vandalized nearby bank branches. In another part of the city, Sham Shui Po, video footage showed a bloodied taxi driver who was dragged out of his car and stomped on by a group of protesters after the vehicle hit some of them.

It was one of the most chaotic weekends since anti-China protests kicked into high gear, with demonstrators paralyzing swaths of the financial hub after the government imposed emergency rule to ban face masks. Protests on Monday failed to gain significant traction, but there’s little sign of a retreat by hardcore demonstrators who’ve grown increasingly violent.

Activist Leung “Long Hair” Kwok-hung, center, burns a placard during a pro-democracy protest near the Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Center in the Wan Chai district of Hong Kong, China, on Tuesday, Oct. 1, 2019.
Chan Long Hei—Bloomberg via Getty Images

The unrest has turned parts of Hong Kong into battle zones on weekends and holidays, wreaked havoc on the tourism industry and sent the $360 billion economy hurtling toward recession.

But so far at least, wealthy enclaves like the Peak and Repulse Bay have been unaffected by the violence. What’s more, many big companies have found ways to sidestep transport disruptions and pockets of unrest, including financial firms that generate a large number of the city’s millionaires.

UBS Group AG, the Swiss financial giant, went ahead with a planned board meeting and gathering for clients in Hong Kong last month despite the protests, flying in Chief Executive Officer Sergio Ermotti for the occasion. The city has hosted about $17 billion of initial public offerings this year, including a blockbuster $5 billion listing by Budweiser Brewing Company APAC Ltd. in September.

Of course, the question looming over Hong Kong is whether its role as one of the world’s premier financial and commercial hubs can continue if the protesters and the government fail to reach common ground. As much as $4 billion of deposits has already flowed out of Hong Kong’s banking system to Singapore, according to an estimate from Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

Hong Kong’s uber-rich also risk coming under pressure from China’s government, which has linked them to the rising inequality it blames for the social unrest. The ruling Communist Party’s mouthpiece, the People’s Daily, has said that Hong Kong authorities should take away land from developers through compulsory acquisition.

It’s a threat that some tycoons appear to be taking seriously. On Oct. 4 the Li Ka-shing Foundation, funded by Hong Kong’s richest man, said it would disperse HK$1 billion ($127 million) to help small and medium firms weather the “unprecedented challenges” facing the city’s economy. The move came just a few days after New World Development Co., controlled by billionaire Henry Cheng, said it would donate 3 million square feet (278,710 square meters) of land to help with the city’s housing crisis.

It’s unclear whether the billionaires placed any bids at Sotheby’s this week.

More must-read stories from Fortune:

—How a tweet about Hong Kong put the NBA on the hot seat
—A Hong Kong app developer used Twitter to convince Apple to sell his controversial product
—Starbucks in Hong Kong: Caught in the crossfire
—Hong Kong’s mask ban pits anonymity against the surveillance state
—Plant-based meats have huge potential in China, but Beijing wants a homegrown champion
Catch up with Data Sheet, Fortune’s daily digest on the business of tech.

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