Hong Kong Island: Being Rich is Really Awesome

Hong Kong Island: Being Rich is Really Awesome

by Zhengnan Is Not A Novice

Length:
62Kwords15chapters
Latest:
Ch. 15Humanity and Sophistication
Activity:
Updated 15d agoScraped 21h ago
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About This Novel

Don't think that just because you have money, you can show off your money! Sorry! If you have money, you can show off.

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Official(3)Scraped 4d ago

XI
Xiang Gezi18d ago

A good book, relatively practical, refreshing, with a strong sense of immersion, suitable for old bookworms, and a good combination of business wars and entertainment.

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A Dong17d ago

I'll give it a try

I'll try to see if I can post these contents in the comment area, but the pictures I posted before were not approved. The following is some information I compiled Wu Bingjian (Wu Bingjian, Wu Bingjian) or Wu Bingjian family Enterprise: Qichang Foreign Company: 1829 (Qichang Foreign Company archives, Massachusetts Historical Society, New York Historical Society, Baker Library of Harvard University; Forbes family archives; "Guangzhou Ghost Road", "Old China Notes", Wu Bingjian's letter to Gu Sheng, 1842.12.23, Library of Congress) Michigan Central Railroad: 1830 (Amtrak Bond and Stockholder Records, Michigan Central Railroad Company Archives; Forbes Family Archives) Burlington and Missouri River Railroad: 1830 (U. S. Railroad Company Bond and Stockholder Records, Burlington and Missouri River Railroad Company Archives) Maine Railroad: 1830 (Amtrak Archives) Boston Textile Mills: 1830 (Qichang Yangxing Archives) New York Life Insurance Company: 1830 ("Guangzhou's Ghost Road" and "Notes from Old China") Union Insurance Company of New York: 1830 ("The Ghost Road in Guangzhou") The first stock exchange in New York: 1830 ("Guangzhou's Ghost Road" and "Notes from Old China") Shipping Insurance Alliance: 1830-1840 (Qichang Yangxing Company Archives) American Stock Investment Company: 1830-1840 (Qichang Yangxing Company Archives) American Mining Companies: 1830-1840 (Qichang Yangxing Archives) Albany and Boston Mining Company: 1830-1840 (Qichang Yangxing Archives) American Mining Investment Company: 1830-1840 (Qichang Yangxing Company Archives) U. S. Securities Trading Institutions: 1830-1840 (Qichang Yangxing Company Archives) American Telegraph Company: 1840-1842 ("The Ghost Road in Guangzhou" and "Notes on Old China") First National Bank of New York: 1840 (Qi Chang Yang Company Archives) New York Real Estate Brokerage Company: After 1840 ("Guangzhou's Ghost Road" and "Notes from Old China") Qichang Bank: after 1830 (Qichang Foreign Bank Archives) San Francisco Trading Company: 1860 ("Guangzhou's Ghost Road" and "Notes on Old China") Wu Chongyao (son of Wu Bingjian) Enterprise: American Pacific Shipping Company: 1860 (Qichang Yangxing Company Archives) Overseas Chinese Bank: 1870 (family investment record) Wu Jianzhang Enterprise: Qichang Steamship Company: 1862 ("Research on Qichang Steamship Company's Business in China 1862~1877" "Research on the Transfer of Assets of the Rich and Powerful in the Late Qing Dynasty and the Early Republic of China") Prince Gong's Yixin family Enterprise: Citibank in New York: Late Qing Dynasty (no specific collection records) Prince Rui's family Enterprises: Rockefeller educational, academic institutions and medical institutions in China: On the eve of the fall of the Qing Dynasty (Rockefeller Foundation Archives, Rockefeller Archives Center, USA) Rockefeller Union Hospital in Beijing: On the eve of the fall of the Qing Dynasty (Rockefeller Foundation Archives) San Francisco Union Medical Center: On the Eve of the Qing Dynasty (Rockefeller Foundation Archives) Pu Ru (cousin of Pu Yi) Enterprise: New York Real Estate Company: Republic of China Period (U. S. Immigration Archives) New York Stock Exchange: Republic of China Period (U. S. Immigration Archives) Kang Youwei Enterprise: Company to Protect the Qing Emperor: 1899 (Emperor Protectorate Association Archives) Chicago Baohuanghui Real Estate Company: 1900 (Kang Youwei's "My History") San Francisco Real Estate Project: 1910 (Personal Investment Record) Tang Tingshu Enterprise: Hanyuan Trading Company: 1870 (Kaiping Mining Bureau Archives) New York Tannery: 1870 (Qichang Foreign Company Financing Records) American-Chinese Mercantile Company: 1870 (Trading Archives) Kaiping Mining Bureau U. S. Sales Office: 1880 (Kaiping Mining Bureau Archives) Xu Run Enterprise: CICC Bank: 1875 ("Chronology of Xu Yuzhai's Autobiography", List of Early Shareholders of CICC Bank) Trading Company Affiliated to the Chinese Association: 1880 (San Francisco Overseas Chinese Archives) HSBC Bank San Francisco Branch: 1880 (Early HSBC Archives) Sheng Xuanhuai Company: Standard Oil Affiliates: 1900 (Early Standard Oil Archives) Liang Jingguo (Taipan of Tianbaoxing) Enterprise: American Sugar Company: 1840 (Qichang Foreign Company Financing Records) New York Tea Trading Company: 1840 (Trade Archives) Liang Jitang's Journey: 1850 (Hawaii Sugar Plantation Archives) Lu Guanheng (Lu Guanheng, owner of Guangli Hong) Enterprise: San Francisco Shipping Company: 1830 (Qichang Foreign Company Financing Records) Guangxi River Company: 1850 (San Francisco Company Archives) Fucha Company: Wells Fargo Bank: No specific date (oral information) Abstract: This compilation relies on Chinese and English classics as well as archives, manuscripts and other materials in various collections in the United States to sort out various enterprises and institutions invested and controlled by thirteen merchants in Guangzhou, the Manchu clan and comprador officials in the Qing Dynasty in the United States. Among them, Wu Bingjian relied on the background of the Qing court's Ministry of Internal Affairs , controlled early U. S. Core industries such as securities, mining, railways, insurance, banking, telegraph, and shipping through Qichang Foreign Company, becoming an important source of Wall Street and the U. S. Financial system. Prince Gong, Prince Rui, Puru and other royal family members used royal family assets to invest in the United States. Banking, medical care, education, real estate and other fields are deeply tied to American capital such as Rockefeller. Comprador officials such as Kang Youwei, Tang Tingshu, Xu Run and Sheng Xuanhuai have also successively established trade, financial and industrial companies in the United States. Overall, it can be seen that the United States is regarded as the Qing Dynasty. Continuing in the post-Qing era, its early pillar industries were all built with capital investment from the Qing Dynasty. The open door and shared interests in the Burlingame Treaty were essentially ideological colonization and economic penetration of China. The United States was also one of the powers that received the most reparations and benefits in China in modern times. This is only the information in the United States. There are also some other assets in the United Kingdom and Japan. I haven't sorted it out yet. Some information has not been found yet, so I won't post it until I finish it.

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A Dong17d ago

Author, regarding the old relationship between Hong Kong and Britain, I think you need to update your knowledge base.

The relationship between Li Huanggua's ancestors and Yinggui Lao was not a cooperative relationship at all, but a naked comprador and glove relationship. Li Huanggua's ancestor was a large comprador, so he was able to acquire Huangpu with zero down payment and installment payments from HSBC. If nothing else, this condition was almost impossible at the time. You could be the wolf of a personal boss with nothing. But trying to play with the bank with nothing is simply a fantasy. Especially projects involving tens of billions The market value of Li Huanggua's Yangtze River Holdings was only 700 million at that time. What could he use as a mortgage? Don't believe Shen Bi's words on the surface. Shen Bi is a British ghost. No matter how optimistic he is about Huangpu, it is impossible to say that he will give an unsecured loan of tens of billions to Li Huanggua. The repayment conditions are even easier, with zero down payment and repayment in installments. Isn't it clear that this is helping Li Cucumber to gain momentum? So I checked Li Huagua's background. It was circulated on the Internet that Grandma Li Huagua was the goddaughter of a large comprador during the Qing Dynasty. This rumor is not confirmed. But combined with Li Huagua's experience in starting up, I can reasonably suspect that there is nothing wrong with the information circulating on the Internet. Li Huagua picked up the relationship network of Qing Gou Comprador Otherwise, if the collateral is insufficient, there is only one way to get the loan, and that is the guarantor What guarantor can guarantee tens of billions of dollars? Then there are only the royal families of the old British ghosts, or the major shareholders of HSBC in the United States during the Qing Dynasty. I have a few pictures, I don't know if I can post them. These pictures are the information and sources I compiled on the Internet about the flow of funds in Dog Clearing. Well, the comment section said that my level is not V1 and I cannot post pictures. If you need this information, you can get it from me, free of charge I just want to release this information and promote it

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