2020-02-01 Forbes Asia

(Darren Dugan) #1

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  1. MICHAEL YING
    $2.4 BILLION
    ESPRIT
    AGE: 70

  2. MARTIN LAU
    $2.3 BILLION
    TENCENT
    AGE: 46

  3. JEAN SALATA
    $2.25 BILLION
    BARING PRIVATE EQUITY ASIA
    AGE: 54

  4. VINCENT LO
    $2.2 BILLION
    SHUI ON LAND
    AGE: 70

  5. TANG YIU
    $2.15 BILLION
    BELLE INTERNATIONAL
    AGE: 85

  6. WONG MAN LI
    $2.1 BILLION
    MAN WAH HOLDINGS
    AGE: 54

  7. FONG YUN WAH
    $1.95 BILLION
    HIP SHING HONG GROUP
    AGE: 95

  8. GORDON WU
    $1.9 BILLION
    HOPEWELL HOLDINGS
    AGE: 84
    DA


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

Sofa So Good
WONG MAN LI

in Vietnam, which faces no tariffs. “They
reacted the quickest and most aggressively
when the U.S.-China trade war started,”
says Daiwa Capital Equity Research Di-
rector Carlton Lai in Hong Kong.
So while Man Wah’s sales to the U.S.
last year dropped by more than a quarter,
Lai says it should be able to grab market
share in North America from China-based
competitors. Sales in China, meanwhile,
already account for more than half of Man
Wah’s sales—and for the year ended March
2019, China revenues were $705 million,
up 14% from last year. —Suzanne Nam

It’s been a good year for Wong Man Li’s
furniture maker Man Wah. Best-known
for making recliners, the company’s stock
nearly doubled in the past year, boosting
Wong’s estimated fortune to $2.1 billion
from $1.27 billion in 2019. Most furni-
ture exporters that manufacture in China
have been reeling from the 25% tariff on
exports to the U.S. that went into effect
last May.
Man Wah, whose China factories also
make couches and mattresses, was able to
avoid the brunt of tariffs thanks to having
had the foresight in 2018 to open a factory

HONG KONG’S
50 RICHEST
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