2020-03-01_Forbes_Asia

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FORBES ASIA MARCH 2020

COURTESY OF HARTALEGA

SLOW MOTION


The richest take a hit amid political uncertainty and virus fears.


alaysia’s slowing econ-
omy, now getting hit
by the coronavirus
outbreak, took a toll on
its tycoons. A weaker
ringgit and a nearly 10% decline in
the country’s benchmark stock index
combined to pull the wealth of the
country’s 50 richest lower for the sec-
ond year in a row. Their collective net
worth is $79 billion, down 7% from
a year ago. (The surprise resignation
of Prime Minister Mahathir in late
February took the index down further
after we had locked in net worths.)
Nonagenarian business legend Rob-
ert Kuok, with a net worth of $11.5
billion, remains at No. 1, a position he
has held for over two decades. Kuok is
among four list members whose wealth
shrank by more than $1 billion in the
past year. The hardest-hit in dollar
terms was banking tycoon Teh Hong
Piow, the founder of Public Bank, who slipped to No. 5 from
No. 3 last year.
AirAsia’s Tony Fernandes and Kamarudin Meranun
saw more than a third of their respective fortunes vanish.
Aside from the coronavirus onset curtailing air travel, an-
other blow to their fortunes came in early February after a
UK court ruling implicated AirAsia and unnamed execu-
tives in an Airbus bribery case. AirAsia has denied all allega-
tions of wrongdoing and said it is investigating the matter.
In all, 22 listees saw their net worth decline from a year
ago, but an equal number were modestly better off. Among
the latter group was casino mogul Chen Lip Keong, who

M


moved into the top five for the first
time; he’s at No. 4 with $5.3 billion.
Another gainer is Kuan Kam Hon,
who controls Hartalega Holdings, the
world’s largest maker of nitrile gloves.
Five newcomers enter the ranks
this year, the richest of whom are a
pair of inheritors. Brothers Lee Yeow
Chor and Lee Yeow Seng share a
$4.8 billion legacy left by their fa-
ther Lee Shin Cheng, the architect of
a palm oil and property empire, who
died last June. This year’s new faces
include two tech entrepreneurs: Chu
Jenn Weng, founder of electronics
maker ViTrox; and former Hewlett-
Packard engineer Oh Kuang Eng,
whose Mi Technovation makes semi-
conductor equipment.
Five from last year’s list are miss-
ing this year, most notably Grab co-
founder Anthony Tan. With a lofty
valuation of $14 billion, the ride-
hailing decacorn Grab has grown from its Malaysian roots
to become a regional player headquartered in Singapore.
Tan, a Singapore citizen, therefore may be a candidate for
that country’s rich list. Four others didn’t make the cut this
year, including property developer Leong Kok Wah of Eco
World, who was affected by a glut of new property that de-
pressed prices.

Reporting by Megha Bahree, Muhammad Cohen, Sean Ki-
lachand, Anis Shakirah Mohd Muslimin, Suzanne Nam,
Phisanu Phromchanya, Anuradha Raghunathan and Jes-
sica Tan. Editing assistance by Lucinda Schmidt.

THE LIST MALAYSIA’S 50 RICHEST


BY NAAZNEEN KARMALI

METHODOLOGY
The list was compiled using information from the individuals, stock exchanges, analysts, private databases, government agencies and other
sources. Net worth estimates are based on stock prices and exchange rates as of the close of markets on February 14. Private companies
were valued by using financial ratios and other comparisons with similar publicly traded companies.

No. 9
Kuan
Kam Hon
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