| The Asian Wall Street Journal Weekly 1999 Susan Fenton |
| Title | Subject | Authors |
| Grass may be greener for the residents in Guangdong; Hong Kong economy leads some real-estate investors to reassess land values in mainland. | Business, international | Susan Fenton |
| Green with envy: prime jadeite scarce as mines thin out.(Myanmar) | Business, international | Susan Fenton |
| Hong Kong developers attempt to transform Wanchai: Cheung Kong, Swire Properties bank on molding downtrodden district into thriving area. | Business, international | Susan Fenton |
| Hong Kong narrows portals; city admits fewer job seekers - yet Singapore opens its arms. | Business, international | Susan Fenton |
| Hotels are still suffering; higher occupancy isn't translating into profits.(Hong Kong) | Business, international | Susan Fenton |
| How to stay one step ahead when the taxman cometh: timing and research can help avoid pitfalls and make relocation a bit less taxing. | Business, international | Susan Fenton |
| Land auctions are expected to resume in Hong Kong; government is asking developers for early commitments on sites and bidding fees. | Business, international | Susan Fenton |
| Leadership suits Michael Ying, chief executive of Esprit.(Managers and Managing in Asia)(interview with the CEO of Esprit Holdings Ltd.)(Interview) | Business, international | Susan Fenton |
| Lunch meetings grow popular as company budgets tighten; midday meal gets shorter and cheaper, but wins favor over inefficient, lavish corporate dinners. | Business, international | Susan Fenton |
| Residential real estate may be down, but it isn't out.(Asia's property markets) | Business, international | Susan Fenton |
| Shoppers flood mall since doors opened in November.(Festival Walk in Kowloon, Hong Kong) | Business, international | Susan Fenton |
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