The Wings of Wealth
We often look at stock markets or GDP figures to measure the health of an economy. But I read something recently that suggested a different metric: the second-hand market for Gulfstreams.
It seems the skies over Asia are witnessing a changing of the guard. For years, the Chinese billionaire class was the undisputed king of the tarmac. The G650ER wasn’t just a plane; it was a handshake, a statement that said, “I have arrived.” Now? Those planes are quietly being listed for sale.
The New Captains
The article I read highlights a fascinating shift. As Chinese tycoons face “turbulence” - both economic and political - and opt for a lower profile, the buyers are emerging from the south. The tycoons of Southeast Asia and India are snapping up these birds.
It is a stark visual of the “pecking order” the Economist talks about. Wealth in Asia isn’t disappearing; it is just migrating. The status symbol that once parked in Shanghai is now finding a hangar in Singapore or Mumbai.
Gravity Always Wins
There is a lesson here about the weight of status. When the economy is booming, a private jet is the ultimate freedom. But when the winds change, that same jet becomes a heavy, fuel-guzzling liability - a billboard for excess that you suddenly want to take down.
It makes you realize that even at 40,000 feet, you can’t escape the gravity of a market correction. The planes stay the same; only the logos on the tail change.