Following his graduation, Sheng moved to London and joined Arthur Andersen to train as a chartered accountant. After seven years in England, he returned to Malaysia in 1972, and four years later took up a position at Bank Negara Malaysia, where he did work involving banking regulation. In 1989 he was seconded to the World Bank office in Washington, DC; he came back to Asia in 1993 to serve as deputy chief executive of the Hong Kong Monetary Authority.[1] After that, he was appointed to his position on Hong Kong's SFC in October 1998; Tung Chee Hwa re-appointed him in October 2003 for a further two years.[3] In 2005, he stepped down in favour of Wheatley, who had joined the SFC the year prior after being removed from his position at the London Stock Exchange.[2][4]
Sheng became president of Fung Global Institute, an independent, global think tank based in Hong Kong, in 2011.
In 2013, Sheng was awarded by the Hong Kong Securities and Investment Institute (HKSI) as honorary fellow.
In 2013, Time magazine named Sheng as one of the 100 most influential people in the world.[5]
Since 2011, Sheng has written columns for Project Syndicate, a non-profit international media organization.[6]
Works
Sheng, Andrew (2009), From Asian to global financial crisis: an Asian regulator's view of unfettered finance in the 1990s and 2000s, Cambridge University Press, ISBN978-0-521-13415-6
Quotes
"Why should a financial engineer be paid four to a hundred times more than a real engineer? A real engineer builds bridges. A financial engineer builds dreams and, when those dreams turn out to be nightmares, other people pay for it." —Andrew Sheng, in an interview for the 2010 financial industry documentary Inside Job.[7]