2020-03-01_Forbes_Asia

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MARCH 2020 FORBES ASIA

MALAYSIA’S 50 RICHEST


  1. NGAU BOON KEAT
    $975 MILLION
    DIALOG GROUP
    AGE: 71

  2. NINIAN MOGAN
    LOURDENADIN
    $970 MILLION
    MBF HOLDINGS
    AGE: 66

  3. DAVID KONG
    $900 MILLION
    NIRVANA ASIA
    AGE: 65

  4. LEE OI HIAN
    & HAU HIAN
    $835 MILLION
    BATU KAWAN
    AGES: 69, 66

  5. LIM KANG HOO
    $765 MILLION
    ISKANDAR WATERFRONT HOLDINGS
    AGE: 64

  6. VINCENT TAN
    $750 MILLION
    BERJAYA CORP.
    AGE: 68


24. LIM PENG CHEONG
& PENG JIN
$685 MILLION
SCIENTEX
AGES: 57, 52


  1. SYED AZMAN SYED
    IBRAHIM
    $675 MILLION
    WESTSTAR AVIATION SERVICES
    AGE: 59


Taking the Reins
LEE YEOW CHOR, LEE YEOW SENG

CHANGE IN WEALTH KEY:
UP DOWN UNCHANGED
NEW TO THE LIST RETURNEE

Lee Shin Cheng (center) had appointed his two sons before his death, Lee Yeow Seng (left) and Lee Yeow Chor.

Lee Yeow Chor and Lee Yeow Seng are the
two sons of the late tycoon Lee Shin Cheng,
and heirs to his IOI palm oil and property
fortune. They debut on the list following
their father’s death on June 1, two days shy
of his 80th birthday.
Their shared $4.8 billion fortune shrunk
11% over the past year, due largely to a
roughly 29% slump in IOI Properties Group
shares, as an oversupply in the Malaysian
property market weakened prices, among
other factors such as the U.S.-China trade
disputes, Brexit and weak commodities
prices. Meanwhile, IOI Corp.’s shares fell
less than 2% as concerns the corona-virus
would hurt demand were offset by dry
weather curtailing supplies. The company
declined to comment.
Lee Shin Cheng had appeared on every
Malaysian rich list since 2007. He built IOI
Corp. into a $7 billion (market cap) palm oil
giant with operations in eight countries and
IOI Properties into a $1.7 billion (market
cap) company. The two companies are com-
monly referred to together as the IOI group.
Lee Shin Cheng grew up poor on a rubber
plantation, leaving school at 11 to help his

family by selling ice cream from a bicycle,
then returning to finish his schooling four
years later. In 1961, he tried to get a job at
plantation firm Dunlop Estates, but was
rejected. “I was very disappointed but I de-
cided to work harder and not give up,” Lee
told a local newspaper in 2017.
Instead, he found work at a small rub-
ber plantation and rose to become estate
manager by the age of 30. He started what
would become IOI Properties in 1975, ac-
quired Industrial Oxygen Incorporated (the
original name of IOI) in 1982, then entered
palm oil. In an ironic twist, he bought Dun-
lop Estates in 1989.
Lee is survived by his wife Hoong May
Kuan, his six children—including daughters
Yoke Ling, Yoke Har, Yoke Hean, and Yoke
Hui—as well as 12 grandchildren. Yeow Chor,
53, is IOI Corp.’s group managing director
and CEO, and sits on IOI Properties’ board.
Yeow Seng, 41 and a London-trained lawyer,
is CEO of IOI Properties. He is married to
Yeo Bee Yin, former environment minister
for Malaysia. Their sister Lee Yoke Har is an
executive director at IOI Properties.
THE STAR, MALAYSIA —Anis Shakirah Mohd Muslimin

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