2019-08-26 Bloomberg Businessweek

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publiclysupportedpro-democracy protesters to
be banned from flying into and over China and
asked for the names of all Cathay workers whose
jobs take them through Chinese airspace. China
also demanded that Cathay draw up a new plan
to improve flight safety and security measures.
And, in case that pressure wasn’t intense enough,
some big state-owned businesses including China
Citic Bank International Ltd. and China Huarong
International Holdings Ltd. advised employees not
to book Cathay flights.
Merlin Swire flew to meetings with officials in
Beijing. The airline quickly acceded to China’s
demands and on Aug. 16—following massive
protests at Hong Kong International Airport—
announced the resignation of its British-born chief
executive officer, Rupert Hogg, as well as one of
his deputies. A spokeswoman for Swire declined
to comment.
“This is the most appalling kowtow to Peking,”
David Webb, a Hong Kong activist investor, wrote
on his blog just hours after Chinese state broad-
caster, CCTV, broke the news of Hogg’s departure
on Aug. 16. “Every substantial employer in Hong
Kong, in both the public and private sectors, has
employees who have participated in marches that
have frequently gone beyond their approved spatial
or time limits. Should all the CEOs resign?”
While Merlin Swire appears to be sticking to the
strategy employed by his father—working to keep
peace with Beijing while focusing the business on
Hong Kong—his predicament has become a cau-
tionary tale of modern-day China, with the coun-
try increasingly willing to call out companies that
want access to its lucrative consumer market but
fail to toe the party line.
Cathay isn’t the only global company that’s
become enmeshed with the anti-Beijing protests.
Within days of the airline being castigated by the
Civil Aviation Administration of China and boy-
cotted by state-backed companies, luxury brands
Versace, Coach, and Givenchy apologized for sell-
ing T-shirts that implied Hong Kong wasn’t part of
China. PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) was accused
on Chinese social media—where nationalistic post-
ers are increasingly pushing the country’s causes—
of not condemning the demonstrations enough
after a purported company-linked online post
appeared to support the protests. PwC said the
post was a fraud. Banking giant HSBC Holdings Plc
came under fire from some protest leaders after
its CEO’s public praise of China’s socialist govern-
ment; China and Hong Kong together account for
more than a third of the value of all HSBC’s cus-
tomer accounts globally.

Few companies have more at stake than Cathay,
which is 45%-owned by Swire Pacific, with Air
China holding almost 30%. Most of the airline’s
workers are based in Hong Kong and its hub is the
airport that had become a key site for the protest-
ers. China, along with Hong Kong, accounts for
about half of Cathay’s revenue.
Cathay was in many ways an icon of the freedoms
born of Hong Kong’s British past, with one pilot even
offering favorable words about the protests over his
plane’s intercom. In the days leading up to Beijing’s
crackdown, Cathay Chairman John Slosar told
reporters the company “wouldn’t dream” of telling
employees how to think. Now, with its abrupt about-
face, the airline risks becoming a symbol of acquies-
cence to the central government.
“At the moment, I think most Hong Kongers are
likely to side with” Cathay, says Lo Kin-hei, vice
chairman of Hong Kong’s Democratic Party and a
district councilor. Yet if Cathay “keeps on compro-
mising,” he says, local residents might become less
loyal and turn to Air China or other Chinese carri-
ers when planning their flying.
The Global Times, a newspaper published by
China’s Communist Party, said Hogg’s departure
may not be enough to atone for Cathay’s “luke-
warm attitude” in dealing with its “radical” employ-
ees. “Cathay Pacific’s latest gesture was viewed by
many as too little to restore its scarred reputation
and the loss of customers,” the newspaper said.
Repairing that relationship is important not
only for Cathay, but also for its parent’s other busi-
nesses. A third of Swire’s extensive real estate port-
folio, a third of its 93,000 employees, and half of
its global beverage sales (it bottles Coca-Cola prod-
ucts in 11 Chinese provinces and Shanghai) are on
the mainland.
Cathay workers know they’re under the micro-
scope as well. In a recent Facebook post, the flight
attendants’ union asked members not to talk about
political topics while flying and to be careful on
social media and outside of work hours discussing
issues that could “cause significant effect on every-
one of us now.”
Webb, the activist investor, worries that the cir-
cumstances that led to CEO Hogg’s resignation
could hurt Hong Kong by scaring away talent from
the territory. “The mere fact this has been hap-
pening is enough to start the pressure on a brain
drain,” he said in an interview. “So the longer-term
effects could be quite negative. People don’t want
to work in a place where they might get fired for
their own views.”
Another risk, says Ivan Choy, a political scientist
at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, is that

◼ BUSINESS Bloomberg Businessweek August 26, 2019

● Swirebusinesses’
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◼InChina
◼ Outside China

Swire
Resources

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Foods

Haeco Group

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Coca-
Cola

Cathay
Pacific
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PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY 731; PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES. DATA: COMPANY REPORTS. CHINA INCLUDES HONG KONG AND MACAU; DATA COMPILED FOR THE SIX MONTHS ENDED JUNE 2019

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