Le Freeport
Le Freeport, formerly known as Singapore Freeport, is a high-security storage and display facility in Singapore. Since 2022, the facility is owned by Chinese cryptocurrency billionaire Jihan Wu through his holding company Bitdeer Technologies. Prior to that, a majority stake was held by Natural Le Coultre S.A. of art dealer and shipper Yves Bouvier. Opened near Singapore Changi Airport in May 2010, the facility is modelled after similar institutions in Geneva and Luxembourg.
History
The Freeport concept was pioneered by Swiss art dealer Yves Bouvier through his art shipping company Natural Le Coultre, who also founded the Freeports in Geneva and Luxembourg. Following the success of the concept in Europe, Bouvier expanded it to Asia in the early 2000s at a time when Singapore was beginning to implement a series of laws that increased banking secrecy, strengthened trusts and reduced taxes in order to develop into a global hub for private banking. At the same time, banking secrecy was rolled back in Switzerland, following greater scrutiny on the country's role as a tax haven.Bouvier and diamond dealer Alain Vandenborre are both shareholders in the Singapore Freeport.
In 2022, the facility was purchased by Chinese cryptocurrency billionaire Jihan Wu through his holding company Bitdeer Technologies for .
The facility
The Freeport building was designed by architects and security experts from Switzerland. Owing to its security features, the facility has been described as "part bunker, part gallery" and "Singapore’s Fort Knox for fine art and collectibles." The Freeport's interior features furniture by contemporary designers Ron Arad and Johanna Grawunder. Covering, the facility sports climate-controlled storage rooms.Among its most prominent corporate clients was auction house Christie's, which rented more than a third of the Freeport's storage space until it pulled out in 2018, and Deutsche Bank, which used it to store gold bullion worth $8.9 billion but stated it is no longer a customer there. The Freeport has been credited as one reason, besides the government's exempting of investment-grade precious metals trading from goods and services tax, that Singapore has been slowly reclaiming its role as a physical gold trading hub. According to Bloomberg, the Freeport has reportedly accumulated losses of S$14.4 million over about ten years until 2018, and any potential buyer would inherit a S$20 million debt to Singapore's largest bank, DBS Group Holdings.
Just like the Geneva and Luxembourg facilities, the Singapore freeport has been called into question since the Bouvier Affair, in which Yves Bouvier allegedly misrepresented the cost of artworks and subsequently overcharged clients. A 2018 European Commission report also observed that freeports increased in demand as banks began fighting illegal financial activities, making them potential hotspots for financial crime.