
Godiva, Others Hope For More Chinese Chocolate Consumption: Perhaps looking to cash in on the propensity of more cosmopolitan, urban Chinese to give expensive or boutique chocolate as gifts (and, increasingly, to eat for themselves), Belgian chocolate giant Godiva has aggressively sought expansion in the Chinese market. Having entered Hong Kong in 1998, Godiva decided to test the waters in the mainland last September, opening a store in Shanghai’s Grand Gateway Mall. Apparently satisfied with that store’s popularity, the company has announced that it plans to open two new flagship stores in Shanghai’s swish Xintiandi area and at the Shanghai International Financial Center (IFC). (Via Jing Daily.)
Singaporean Tycoon Ng Teng Fong dies: SINGAPORE—Ng Teng Fong, one of Asia’s richest tycoons and the founder and chairman of Singapore’s largest unlisted property group, Far East Organization, died Tuesday aged 82, the developer said. Far East said in a statement that Mr. Ng had suffered a cerebral hemorrhage on Jan. 23. Forbes Asia magazine in 2009 listed Mr. Ng as the richest person in Singapore, with a net worth of more than US$8 billion. (Via WSJ.com: What’s News Asia.)
Singapore opens world’s first A380 MRO hangar: Singapore’s SIA Engineering on Wednesday opens the first Maintenance, Repair and Overhaul (MRO) hangar in the world to offer commercial maintenance services for the Airbus A380 aircraft here. At the opening of the A380 hangar, Singapore’s Minister in Prime Minister’s Office, Second Minister for Finance and Transport, Lim Hwee Hua said that as a gateway to Asia, Singapore is well- positioned to ride the wave of aviation expansion. (Via Business – People’s Daily Online.)
Wal-Mart Sells World Expo Products In Shanghai: As the cooperative partner of USA Pavilion at the 2010 Shanghai World Expo, Wal-Mart has started to sell World Expo related licensed products in its Nanpu Bridge store in Shanghai. To promote the Shanghai World Expo and to meet consumers’ demands for World Expo licensed products, the American retail giant Wal-Mart was formally selected as the franchised retailer of World Expo licensed products in January 2010. (Via ChinaRetailNews.com.)
Japanese men miss out on Valentine’s chocolate as women treat themselves: Japan’s unique Valentine’s Day tradition of women giving chocolate to men is melting away as more women show a preference for pampering each other instead of their boyfriends and spouses. The practice of giving tomo choco (friendship chocolate) has been highlighted as a new trend in a recent survey that found 74 percent of women plan to give a Valentine’s gift to a female friend but only 32 percent intended to buy something for a boyfriend. The popularity of tomo choco has been attributed to the way that the custom offers women an excuse to have a girls’ night out – something pertinent at a time when so much social interaction is going digital. (Japan Times) (Via News On Japan.)
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