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Turbulence in the Gilded Skies

Tuesday, January 20, 2026

Written by BusInsights

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.