People: China Life’s Liu Anlin Expelled From Communist Party

China’s long-running anti-corruption campaign leads today’s look at personnel moves from around Asia’s real estate industry with the former head of top investor China Life having been booted from the Communist Party for alleged crimes and rule violations. Also making the list, Hong Kong-listed Grand Ming loses its chief financial officer and Dalian Wanda’s hotel division sees its chairman resign.

LIu Anlin China LifeLIu Anlin China LifeFormer China Life Party secretary and president Liu Anlin has been expelled from the Communist Party of China for violations of Party rules and laws, according to a statement by the Party’s Central Commission for Discipline Inspection and the National Commission of Supervision. The disciplinary unit said that Liu had lost his ideals and convictions, betrayed his mission, exhibited weak political consciousness, failed to implement major decisions and deployments of the Party Central Committee and incurred significant losses through illegal operations among other charges, including embezzlement and bribery. 

Kwan Wing Wo Grand MingKwan Wing Wo Grand MingHong Kong-listed Grand Ming Holdings informed the stock exchange on 17 October that Kwan Wing Wo (pictured) has tendered his resignation as executive director and chief financial officer of the company with effect from the following day. Kwan is said to have resigned for health reasons with the company having brought on board Tang Sai Cheong to take up the chief financial officer role from 2 October. 

Zhang Chunyuan WandaZhang Chunyuan WandaWanda Hotel Development announced to the Hong Kong stock exchange on 16 October that its chairman and executive director, Ning Qifeng, has resigned from his roles with the company due to a change in his work arrangements following disposal of a subsidiary. Executive director Liu Yingwui also resigned for the same reason. With Ning’s departure, the unit of Dalian Wanda Group has redesignated non-executive director Zhang Chunyuan (pictured) to an executive role with the long-time Wanda leader taking over the chairman slot.

Sun Hao PGIMSun Hao PGIMPGIM managing director Sun Hao has relocated to Hong Kong from Shanghai, where he heads business development and sales for the third party capital management division of Prudential Group. A six-year company veteran, the Peking University graduate made the shift to Shanghai this month after previously serving as managing director with PGIM’s investor relations group from the company’s office in Shanghai, according to his LinkedIn profile.

eng-seat-moey_ MITeng-seat-moey_ MITThe manager of Singapore-listed Parkway LIfe REIT informed the stock exchange on 17 October that the company has named Kwok Seat Moey (pictured) to an executive director position on its board with effect from 20 October. Now 66, the former DBS Group executive joins the board as Ho Kian Guan retires due to the nine-year limit on non-executive director appointments, with Ho also giving up the chairman role with the manager.

Taranjot GulatiTaranjot GulatiTaranjot Gulati has joined DivyaSree Developers as chief executive officer for asset management with the Bangalore-based builder, according to a LinkedIn update. Gulati joins the special economic zone specialist after less than half of a year with Paras Buildtech India, after previously spending more than five years at property consultancy CBRE in Singapore. At CBRE Gulati served most recently as head of client solutions for the company’s smart building solutions unit.

Conal_NEWLAND_06Conal_NEWLAND_06Cushman & Wakefield said on 16 October that it has appointed Conal Newland (pictured) as head of living for Asia Pacific, with the international director heading up the property consultancy’s services to clients in the living sector across Australia, New Zealand, Japan, South Korea and Hong Kong. In the same announcement, C&W said that it has hired Josh Rose-Nokes as director for living research in Asia Pacific. 

Crystal Chow BlackrockCrystal Chow BlackrockCrystal Chow has joined BlackRock in Hong Kong as vice president for corporate communications in Asia Pacific, according to a LinkedIn update. Chow took on her new role with the asset management giant recently after just over a year with FWD Insurance in Hong Kong, where she had worked as senior manager for group corporate communications. The University of Hong Kong graduate also has experience with communications consultancies FGS Global and Finsbury Glover Hering.

If you know of other Asia real estate professionals changing their jobs, getting promoted or just doing something exciting please contact us here at Mingtiandi.

Source link

Visited 2 times, 2 visit(s) today

Related Article

loadingImg

China’s Film Industry Faces Reckoning as Holiday Hits Fall Flat

Shares of Chinese movie and cinema firms took a steep tumble following the National Day holiday, with an industry index down 12% over the seven trading days after the weeklong break. The sector finally showed signs of stabilization on Monday, when the index gained 2.2%. Driving the rout was a lackluster box office performance during

Australia's Anthony Albanese and President Donald Trump at a signing ceremony

Trump, Albanese sign $8.5B rare earths deal to counter China dependence

NioCorp CEO Mark Smith told Mornings with Maria the Pentagon’s $10M grant will boost Nebraska’s rare earth project as the U.S. races to rebuild supply chains vital for security and the economy. President Donald Trump and Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese on Monday signed an agreement on rare earths and critical minerals as the two allies

How the Australia mineral deal plays into U.S. relations with China

How the Australia mineral deal plays into U.S. relations with China

IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser. Voters grapple with data centers and rising electricity costs in November elections 03:32 Appeals court rules Trump administration can deploy National Guard troops to Portland 02:23 Now Playing How the Australia mineral deal plays into U.S. relations with China 02:56

Trump presses Zelenskyy on Russia terms, AWS outage disrupts web, Apple nears $4T, China growth slows amid trade tensions.

AWS outage, Apple near $4 trillion mark, China’s slow growth — TradingView News

It’s been a volatile start to the week. A tense Trump-Zelenskyy meeting has shifted the tone on Ukraine peace talks, Amazon’s AWS outage broke parts of the internet, Apple is edging toward a record $4T valuation on iPhone strength, and China’s economy just posted its slowest growth in a year amid renewed trade tensions. Here’s

Numbers that tell: Apple iPhone 17 series is a 'hit' in the US and China

Numbers that tell: Apple iPhone 17 series is a ‘hit’ in the US and China

Apple shares climbed 4% on Monday, October 20, 2025, following a report from Counterpoint Research highlighting robust early sales of the iPhone 17 series in the US and China. The iPhone 17, launched in September, has outperformed its predecessor, the iPhone 16, by 14% in both markets within its first 10 days of availability. Counterpoint

United States and Australia sign critical-minerals agreement as a way to counter China

United States and Australia sign critical-minerals agreement as a way to counter China

“Australia is really, really going to be helpful in the effort to take the global economy and make it less risky, less exposed to the kind of rare earth extortion that we’re seeing from the Chinese,” Kevin Hassett, the director of the White House’s National Economic Council, told reporters on Monday morning ahead of Trump’s

Australia's Prime Minister Anthony Albanese

Australia to get nuclear subs faster as Trump seeks to speed up AUKUS timeline

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! The U.S. wants to fast-track outfitting Australia with nuclear submarines under the trilateral agreement between the U.S., Australia and the U.K. to beef up Australia’s submarine force aimed at countering Chinese influence in the Indo-Pacific.  In the agreement, known as AUKUS, the U.S. will sell up to

US and Australia sign rare earths deal to counter China's dominance

US and Australia sign rare earths deal to counter China’s dominance

AFP via Getty Images The US and Australia have signed a deal intended to boost supplies of rare earths and other critical minerals, as the Trump administration looks for ways to counter China’s dominance of the market. Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said the deal would support a pipeline of $8.5bn (£6.3bn) “ready-to-go” projects that