Fly home
This is where fourth-generation funeral service provider Ang has one in every of his businesses, Flying Home. Step through the opaque glass doors and the din of Toa Payoh subsides.
With light green partitions, skylights and high ceilings, the Flying Home looks more like a recent chapel, if not for the hidden embalming room. Biodegradable ash containers sit next to brochures about transforming family members into souvenir diamonds.
Singaporeans have traditionally held all the pieces from weddings to funerals on open-air “bark decks” in public housing estates. As family units have shrunk and turn out to be wealthier, there was a necessity for a more individualized approach. Ang said the broader group, Ang Chin Moh Funeral Directors, is growing at a median of 5 percent a 12 months.
Hedge funds
Death also proves lucrative in less conventional ways. Life settlements, sometimes called death bonds, are also popular among the many wealthy in Asia.
We don’t cause death, because death comes naturally, but we do profit the insured
Insurance firms normally offer customers a lump sum to cancel their policy after a certain age. Insurers get monetary savings since the policy never has to pay out and customers can spend money they’d otherwise pay on premiums before they die.
Enter a hedge fund. By offering customers more money than insurance firms, they take over paying the premiums and turn out to be the final word beneficiary. When the person dies, the payment can be made to the hedge fund so long as the families cooperate and life insurance firms don’t find an escape clause; or actuarial tables change, dramatically changing the worth of the policy.
While some people find it difficult to shake off the unpleasantness – the faster people die, the greater the hedge fund’s profit – family offices and enormous institutional investors, especially Apollo Global Management Incorporated, are increasing their exposure.

The appeal is profits which might be uncorrelated with the worldwide economy because death, like taxes, is for certain. Investors in Asia have been slower to enter the market in comparison with their US and European counterparts – until now.
The demand has turn out to be so great that Kamet Capital is considering accepting external funds. Singapore is even becoming a preferred roadshow stop for all times settlement funds on the lookout for sponsors.
“Markets go up, markets go down, economies grow, recession hits – it doesn’t affect people dying, right?” Goh said. “We don’t cause death because death comes naturally, but we do benefit policyholders so they can get discovery at a fair price.”
Third generation
For the Tsao clan of Singapore, who’ve made a fortune in shipping and property, alleviating the results of aging and death has been within the family for 3 generations.
At the age of 86, Tsao Ng Yu Shun, an independent entrepreneur, founded the Tsao Foundation to supply services to the elderly. Since 1993, the operation has expanded to incorporate a community center in central Singapore, offering elder care training and residential visiting services. Tsao died in 2001, and the muse is now headed by her granddaughter, Mary Ann.
The foundation charges fees for a few of its services, however the goal is sustainability somewhat than profitability. The Tsao family office that funds the muse makes investments across asset classes across environmental, social and governance frameworks, and the 2 entities’ goals may align.
“We’re usually interested in education, health care, aging, longevity and a few other things,” the younger Tsao said of the family office’s broader investments. When it involves palliative and hospice care, Tsao just isn’t aware of many for-profit entities, but said that if such investments do occur, “and we predict it’s the best thing to do, we’re totally not against it.”
Because the muse favors nursing homes for the elderly and enabling aging at home, it doesn’t support nursing facilities. However, he maintains contact with a few of the same stakeholders, so he understands the obstacles.
“People give all sorts of strange reasons, like ghosts coming to their house,” Ng Wai Chong, the muse’s clinical director, said of 1 housing campaign against nursing homes. “There is a lot of stigma around hospices and funeral homes in society because people believe they influence real estate prices.”
Changing attitudes
The result has been a slow expansion of elder care facilities. Data from the Ministry of Health show that at the tip of 2018, there have been 15,205 nursing home beds in Singapore. Similarly populous Sydney had a population of over 72,000 in mid-2019.
Tsao said efforts to teach residents and gain grassroots support are key to gaining community approval for projects. Over time, attitudes towards death and dying have improved.
“Older people don’t feel as uncomfortable and appreciate having a proper opportunity to talk about it,” she said. “My father and mother had very different views on how they wanted to live out their last days, but it was OK” to speak about it.
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This growing acceptance is fueling the transformation of once shunned industries.
Showers, changing rooms and wireless web may not seem essential in a funeral home, but Ang says a majority of these improvements have helped attract the following generation of shoppers and employees. In 2004, Flying Home received roughly five CVs per 12 months; now Ang thinks he’ll get it every month.
The family can also be looking further afield, exploring ways to enter the Japanese market and becoming a distributor of advanced equipment akin to bone lifts and embalming supplies.
Family offices are particularly focused on financing this sector, and Ang would eventually prefer to list a few of his business. An IPO could be very different than just a little boy standing silently and embarrassed in a classroom.
“The attitude has changed a lot,” he said. “Because I went through this social stigma, it gave me the motivation and energy to change the way people should view death and dying.”







