Gordon Tang (pictured) owns a controlling stake in property developer SingHaiyi with his wife Celine. The couple took the Singapore-listed firm private in January 2022 in a $350 million deal.
Their largest asset is a stake in Singapore-listed Suntec REIT, which holds commercial property in Singapore's prime financial district. Other interests include stakes in OKH Global and OUE Commercial.
Neil Bush, brother of Jeb and former president George W. Bush, chaired SingHaiyi until 2021.
Tang, a non-executive director at SingHaiyi, relinquished his role as managing director to spend more time developing townships in Shantou, China.
The Tangs also took construction and property firm Chip Eng Seng private in 2023, in a deal that valued the company at $440 million.
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For the first time, the NHL's annual winter classic will be played on New Year's Eve. But the matchup is familar, with the Chicago Blackhawks hosting the St. Louis Blues.
Keegan Murray has struggled this season for the Kings, and as the team moves forward, they need to prioritize him getting back into the swing of things.
Property tycoon Gordon Tang and his wife Celine have offered to buy out shares of Singapore-listed Suntec REIT in a deal valuing one the biggest office landlords in the financial hub at $2.5 billion.
UOB, one of city-state’s oldest lenders, hits sweet spot with youth across the region after buying Citibank’s consumer banking operations and partnering with global superstar Taylor Swift.
“I seize opportunities when everybody is frightened,” declared Kwek Leng Beng, executive chairman of property firm City Developments at a media briefing in August.
A notable generational shift took place in May at Pontiac Land, one of Singapore’s largest family-owned property groups, which began in 1961 as a textile trading business.
Sea’s billionaire cofounders, chairman and CEO Forrest Li and chief operating officer Gang Ye, are among the biggest gainers this year as shares of the New York-listed e-commerce, digital entertainment and fintech company more than doubled from a year ago.
Less than three years after its IPO on the New York Stock Exchange, business process outsourcing firm TDCX was taken private in a deal valuing the Singapore-headquartered firm at just over $1 billion.