‘Singapore-washing’ unwinds as both China and the U.S. scrutinize corporate roots

‘Singapore-washing’ unwinds as both China and the U.S. scrutinize corporate roots


“Guangdong’s complete industrial ecosystem and first-class business environment have made Shein’s fast growth possible,” founder Chris Xu told the crowd on Feb. 24, at a forum hosted by the Guangdong provincial government. He boasted that Shein currently supports over 600,000 jobs in the Chinese province, and pledged to invest over 10 billion yuan ($1.5 billion) to fortify its local supply chain.

For years, Shein tried to present itself as a Singapore-based multinational to reassure regulators and investors worried about its ties to China. Experts think Xu’s move shows that Shein is trying to reconcile with Beijing, as the Nanjing-founded firm eyes a Hong Kong IPO following failed attempts to list in New York and London.

“Given Shein’s setbacks in the U.S. and Europe in recent years, it appears to be strengthening its ties to China and repositioning itself in the global market,” says Qu Feng, an associate professor of economics at Singapore’s Nanyang Technological University.

Yet Shein was just one Chinese firm that moved parts of the company, if not the whole business outright, to Singapore over the past decade. The group includes ByteDance-owned TikTok and AI startup Manus, as companies sought to distance themselves from China and get greater access to global capital. 

Shein’s more public embrace of its Chinese ties is one example of how this strategy—dubbed “Singapore-washing” by observers—is starting to come undone. Western governments still treat Chinese-founded companies as Chinese, regardless of where they are incorporated, while Beijing expects these companies to show greater loyalty at home.

Why firms moved to Singapore

Shein was founded in 2008 in Nanjing, China, by Chinese-American businessman Chris Xu. Best known for its trendy apparel sold at ultra-low prices, the company has become one of the world’s largest fast-fashion platforms, with a major presence in the U.S. and European markets. 

The company first started planning for a U.S. IPO in 2020, but shelved those plans in 2024 following scrutiny by both U.S. and Chinese officials. Backup plans to list in London also stalled, as U.K. regulators scrutinized its labor and sourcing practices.

Shein relocated its headquarters to Singapore in 2021. It was part of a broader trend that analysts deemed “Singapore-washing,” where China-founded firms diluted their Chinese identity by relocating part, or all, of their companies to the Southeast Asian city-state.



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