Auckland murder: Victim Elizabeth Zhong s vineyard company Carrick Wines $12m in debt
19 Jan, 2021 05:13 PM
2 minutes to read
Carrick Wines in Bannockburn near Queenstown was put up for tender in December. Photo / Dean Purcell
Carrick Wines in Bannockburn near Queenstown was put up for tender in December. Photo / Dean Purcell
Otago Daily Times
By: Daisy Hudson
An Otago vineyard owned by a murdered Auckland woman owed more than $12 million when it went into receivership.
Carrick Wines Ltd, in Bannockburn, was owned by 55-year-old Elizabeth Zhong, who was found dead in the boot of her car in November, near her East Auckland house.
HSBC boss Noel Quinn writes to ex-Hong Kong lawmaker to explain why his accounts were frozen
Ted Hui slams the UK lender for ‘political toadyism’ after freezing his bank accounts and credit cards
Ted Hui wrote on Facebook that Noel Quinn had told him that HSBC “had no choice” but to legally freeze his bank accounts and credit cards after they’d been instructed to do so by the Hong Kong police Anthony Wallace/Getty Images By Monday January 18, 2021 9:40 am
Former Hong Kong lawmaker Ted Hui has criticised HSBC for “political toadyism” after it froze his bank accounts and credit cards.
Another Bank Narrows Its Presence in Commodity Trade Finance
by Ship & Bunker News Team
Tuesday January 19, 2021
Netherlands-based
Rabobank has joined the club of lenders backing off from commodity trade finance, in what may herald tighter access to credit for the bunker industry. Rabobank plans to streamline its trade and commodity finance offering by closing terminating this activity in its
London,
Global Trade Review reported Tuesday, citing a letter from the bank to its clients. The move has been accelerated by rapidly changing global markets due to the Covid pandemic, trade wars and changing banking landscape, the publication cited Rabobank as saying.