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LI KA-SHING, HONG KONG PROPERTY & RETAIL MAGNATES

  • Writer: ASIA INSPIRE
    ASIA INSPIRE
  • 4 hours ago
  • 2 min read

Li Ka-shing's net worth is estimated around $37.3 billion as of early 2024, making him Hong Kong's richest tycoon, primarily from his stake in CK Hutchison Holdings and other ventures, though exact figures fluctuate with market changes.



He is a dominant figure in Asian business, known as "Superman" for his Midas touch in real estate and investments, with significant holdings across ports, retail, telecom, and infrastructure.



FROM POVERTY TO PLASTIC


Having arrived in Hong Kong in 1940 as a 12-year-old refugee from war-torn China, Li was forced to find factory work aged 14 after his father died – working 16 hours a day in a plastics company. He eventually became the factory’s top salesman and was promoted to factory manager aged 18.


Ambitious and entrepreneurial, the young Li soon ventured out on his own, and in 1950, at the age of 22, started his own plastic manufacturing business, Cheung Kong Industries, opening his first factory with US$6,500 in savings and loans from family members. Among the company’s many clients, Hasbro commissioned the factory to make G.I. Joe dolls for export to the US.


Not limiting himself to plastics, Li led and developed his company into a leading real estate investment company in Hong Kong, which he listed on the HK stock exchange in 1972.


Known to make smart local property investments, often buying when others sold – including acquiring Hong Kong property during the cultural revolution in 1967 – Li has been likened to Warren Buffet.


Having cemented his wealth with some judicious local property investments, Li began to diversify and make smart, strategic investments into growing sectors including ports, energy, retail, telecoms and biotech.



Building a Hong Kong Empire

Li made key acquisitions, first in Hutchison Whampoa in 1979, becoming the first person of Chinese origin to own one of the British-founded companies that dominated Hong Kong’s economy since its founding in 1941, and in 1979 acquired Hongkong Electric Holdings – before entering the mobile telecoms market in 1983.


Among Li’s many other smart deals, the sale of his Orange mobile-phone unit in the UK to Germany’s Mannesmann AG in 1999, the A$7.4 billion takeover of Australian power provider Duet Group in 2017, along with major investments in tech startups including Facebook, Spotify and Siri.


In 2015, the billionaire businessman restructured his major holdings into two companies – one operating his property assets (CK Asset Holdings) and the other (CK Hutchison Holding) holding the rest, including CK Infrastructure Holdings and Power Assets Holdings.


Today, the group operates a diverse range of businesses, spanning telecoms, port services, retail, energy and infrastructure – and has become a world leader in port services, holding interests in 54 ports in 25 countries, and a leader in the telecoms industry, now serving 176 million customers worldwide.


Among its world-class retail offer, Watson Group is the world’s leading global health and beauty retailer with 16,300 stores in 28 markets, operating not only Watsons, but also ParknShop supermarket and in Europe – brands including Superdrug and Savers.


In fact, Li-controlled companies are among the biggest foreign investors in the UK – including the UK’s biggest pubs and brewery group, Greene King, which CK Asset Holdings snapped up for US$5.6 billion in 2019

 
 
 

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