Showing posts with label lim goh tong. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lim goh tong. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 07, 2007

More expensive bets

Well, news that Genting International will incur a cost overrun of S$800m for its casino resort (Pix source: Genting International Proposal listed by Wikipedia) on Singapore's Sentosa Island due partly to higher construction expenses has not come as a surprise.

Genting International, a unit of the late Malaysian tycoon Lim Goh Tong's Genting Bhd, now expects to spend as much as S$6 billion to build the Sentosa casino, up 15 per cent from an earlier estimate of S$5.2 billion.

The Reuters report said the new budget for the casino, which includes a contingency provision of S$250 million, also covers the cost of six new attractions as well as improvements to transportation and access infrastructure.

Singapore is undergoing a construction boom due to the award of several large projects such as a new financial centre, the two casino resorts, several shopping malls and a slew of redevelopments of private apartments known as en-bloc deals in Singapore.

Similarly, Sophie's World reckons that cost overrun is expected for the other casino project -- Las Vegas Sands' 20.6-hectare piece of waterfront land at Marina Bay.

Apart from the tight construction market, Singapore is facing a higher import bill for sand and other building materials due to the ban on the sale of sand by neighbours Malaysia and Indonesia.

In addition, the construction job for the Marina Bay Sands project on the reclaimed land is likely to be way more complex than Genting's project. According to an engineer, a lot of big boulders were used in the reclamation of the land in the 1980s. This makes it more difficult to extricate the boulders for the foundation work. By the way, Sophie's World has never seen so many construction cranes on a single site!

So, will the two casino resort developers be able to complete the mammoth projects -- each resort will cost as much as the Circle Line subway system in Singapore -- by 2010 as planned?

Don't bet on it!

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Another farewell to Uncle Lim

Slinki Malinki attended the funeral of the late Malaysian casino man Lim Goh Tong over the weekend at Genting Highlands on the border of Selangor and Pahang. He was quite moved. He sent some pix and a well-written report of his experience.


The towel with the red ribbon is the traditional cloth they give out to all the funeral guests. This is in addition to the something sweet and something red that are handed out at traditional funerals (red to ward off the bad spirits, and sweet to lift your own spirit). Somebody said that the towel is only handed out for a greatly loved one, someone that you would cry in sorrow on the demise of, and the towel is for you to wipe your tears.


This a photo montage of Lim Goh Tong throughout the years. The Chinese press ran it. The Malay and English press are more sensitive to use pictures of the founder with successive PMs and big shots. But the Chinese press has no problem celebrating just the man himself, and how he has an avuncular look through the years.


The last picture is what truly tugged at my heart strings. The poster speaks for itself. It was a farewell not to a Tan Sri, not to a "founder", but simply to "Uncle Lim". There were many school children and handicapped kids at the funeral procession. I gather that Lim Goh Tong had been a generous benefactor to the needy.

But what I found inspiring was seeing the school children joining in with full respect. I overheard some of them saying how they wished they could get closer to the cortege to pay a proper last respect.

And while walking with the funeral procession, I saw some of the handicapped children struggling with their ungainly strides, when asked by their minders whether they wanted to rest, said they wanted to continue walking.

To me, that was the spirit of Lim Goh Tong
fighting the odds living on...

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Grand farewell for Uncle Lim

Malaysian and international media has given plenty of coverage on the death of casino founder Lim Goh Tong (pix from The Star) of the Genting group last week.

Various reports said more than 10,000 had turned to give a grand farewell to the man, who never received such great adulation when he was still alive. It's quite amazing. He did many things quietly: giving to many charities, lending money to an Indian tribe to build their casino in the US, giving money to his village in China, and sponsoring many other events.

No PR machine could have generated such a massive turnout of people at a funeral. You should also watch this news video by The Star.

Uncle Lim has definitely left behind an unmatched legacy. His highlands resorts, once considered a piped dream, now attracts more visitors than all the tourists to Malaysia every year.

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

RIP: Lim Goh Tong

This a lovely snapshot of the life and achievements of the late Lim Goh Tong, who built a built a mountain-top casino resort in Malaysia and a sprawling empire from scratch more than 40 years ago. All the pix came from The Star, which has a gallery and a video as a tribute to the tycoon who died yesterday.

Goh Tong at the celebration of his 90th birthday earlier this year. Probably his age in Chinese calendar as he's supposed to be 89 based on official records showing his year of birth as 1918.


Aerial view of the Genting Highlands resort, about 50km from Kuala Lumpur. The Star said First World Hotel is currently the largest hotel in the world with 6,118 rooms. The resort has the only legal casino in Malaysia and theme parks.


He started building the casino and the resort when he was already in his 50s.


Goh Tong and old friend, former Malaysian Prime Minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad. They probably had mutual admiration for each other.

Genting is one of the biggest, if not the biggest, taxpayers in Malaysia. Last year, Genting dished out more than RM500 million in corporate income tax. This does not include all the other gaming duties paid by gaming arm Resorts World. Genting earned nearly RM2.8 billion in pre-tax profit last year on the back of revenue of nearly RM7 billion.



A 1969 photograph showing Goh Tong briefing the late Tunku Abdul Rahman, who was Malaysia's first PM, on the plans for Genting Highlands Resort.

Genting has announced that it will close its casino and theme parks for 12 hours on Monday as a mark respect to its founder. Read more news reports on the funeral.


RIP: Lim Goh Tong (1918-2007)

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Updated: Demise of Malaysian casino king

Legendary Malaysian businessman Lim Goh Tong, 90, passed away today. The founder of the Genting empire will always be known in history as the man who secured the sole casino licence in predominantly Muslim Malaysia in the 1960s. It's definitely no easy feat for him to retain the license in a country that has becomingly increasingly Islamic. No new casino or gaming license will ever be issued again in the country as Islam forbids gambling.

Oddly, the late Chinese tycoon celebrated his birthday this year. Although he didn't have formal education, he was quite spiritual. He was the founder of the Chin Swee Temple (pix from the Genting website) near the more famous casino at Genting Highlands.

Goh Tong had turned Genting into a global name, with the help of his second son Kok Thay and other family members. They will continue to make Genting a bigger gaming company in the world.

Unfortunately, he won't be around to witness the next big thing -- the group's S$5-billion bet to build an integrated resort with casino called Resorts World at Sentosa in Singapore by 2010 or 2011. It will be one of Singapore's first two casinos following the lifting of a 40-year ban.

The Singapore project could even eclipse the Malaysian casino one day.

Below is an abridged profile of the late casino tycoon by Bloomberg. Additional reading and viewing -- The Star coverage, New Straits Times, The Genting Story, The Lim family of Genting and other news reports.


Genting Founder Lim Goh Tong Dies at 90 After Illness (Update1)
By Stephanie Phang

Oct. 23 (Bloomberg) -- Lim Goh Tong, who built a hilltop casino in Malaysia and turned it into Asia's biggest publicly traded gaming company, died today. He was 90.

The founder of Kuala Lumpur-based Genting Bhd. and Malaysia's third-richest person, died peacefully after a short illness, his grandson, Justin Leong, said by phone.

Lim, who started out selling vegetable seeds in China, built Malaysia's only licensed casino, risking his life and facing bankruptcy along the way. He created what is now Malaysia's eighth-largest listed company, with interests in gaming, hotels and cruise lines from the U.K. to Hong Kong.

The Genting group is constructing Singapore's second gaming resort and includes Resorts World Bhd., which operates the casino in Malaysia. The combined stock market value of the assets, including interests in oil palm plantations and property, surpasses $22 billion, according to the company.

Lim was born in the mountainous Anxi county in China's Fujian province. He was named after the parasol tree, considered auspicious among Chinese, by his maternal grandfather, who hoped the name would bring him good fortune, Lim said in his 2004 autobiography. Forbes in May put his wealth at $4.3 billion.

Lim, who didn't speak English and had no knowledge of engineering, also ventured into mining and construction. His experience "and a little layman common sense'' helped him succeed, he wrote in his autobiography.

Enjoying the cool mountain air of a hill station while working on a hydroelectric project in 1963, Lim came up with the idea of building a hilltop resort nearer to Malaysia's capital of Kuala Lumpur. The plan stunned friends and fellow contractors, who warned Lim, then 45 and a successful businessman, against it.

"The Genting project basically fitted my idea of an ideal business,'' Lim wrote. "No one was interested in it, which meant no competition. I took the plunge against all odds and held on steadfastly.''

He spent seven years developing Genting, laying a road and building a hotel on a 1,800-meter (5,900-foot) hill outside the city. Failing to lure others to join, Lim invested all his money in the project without getting any returns in the seven years it took to build.

"At one stage, I was teetering on the brink of bankruptcy,'' he wrote.

Lim had support from the government of Malaysia, which gained independence from British rule in 1957. The Malaysian government permitted him to pursue the project and subsidized the road. It also gave Genting a casino license, renewable every quarter, and a six-year tax break for the resort business.

During construction, Lim almost lost his life at least six times from falling trees, driving mishaps and a landslide, according to his autobiography.

Genting, which means "atop the clouds'' in Mandarin, is a complex of hotels, themed casinos, amusement parks, shops and restaurants. The resort attracts more than 18 million visitors a year.

"Besides being a tremendous individual achievement, Lim's success in developing Genting Highlands from virgin jungle into a world-class resort reflects Malaysia's economic progress in the last four decades,'' former Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad said in his foreword to the tycoon's biography. "Even without the advantages of higher education, he has proven that nothing is impossible.''

Lim married Lee Kim Hua in 1944. They had three daughters, three sons and 19 grandchildren, according to his biography. His second son, Lim Kok Thay, is Genting's chief executive officer.

Kok Thay succeeded his father as president and CEO in 2002, before becoming chairman in December 2003. Genting needed to become a "global corporation,'' Kok Thay said when he replaced his father as chairman in 2003.

Monday, April 16, 2007

Updated: Double joy for Goh Tong

Malaysian casino founder Lim Goh Tong (The Star pix) has plenty to celebrate although he now looks very frail. On Sunday, he celebrated his 90th birthday. Although he is now in a wheelchair, there is still plenty of public display of filial piety.

According to New Straits Times, second son Kok Thay, who is now the chief of the casino group, helped the father to receive a congratulatory call from Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi. And his 28-year-old grandson Justin Leong, who is Genting’s youngest director, reportedly pledged to donate his salary to charity and receive a token pay of RM1 for one year as a tribute to the old man.

Another sweet piece of news to Goh Tong is the ground-breaking for the Singapore casino project, which was mired in controversy following the deal with Macau casino king Stanley Ho earlier this year. Genting held its ground-breaking ceremony at Sentosa today.

Singapore’s Minister for Trade and Industry Lim Hng Kiang reportedly said that the probity check over Genting's partnership with Stanley is no longer an issue. Regulatory alarm bell went off when Genting tied up with Stanley, who is apparently linked to the triads in Macau, in the Sentosa resort and casino project. Genting has since severed its link to Stanley in the Sentosa project. But probity check on any new casino project in Singapore is still needed going forward as the actual casino licence will only be issued when the integrated resort project is substantially completed.

Can the new Genting generation be as steady as the old man? The Stanley Ho episode shows that Genting’s younger generation will still need to tread carefully although its Singapore casino project is now back on track.

Saturday, December 02, 2006

The Genting Story

Raffles Conversation in The Business Times, Singapore, today:

RISE OF THE GENTING SON
New Genting chief Lim Kok Thay tells EDDIE TOH why it is necessary for him to raise the ante since he took over control of the group from his father

LIM Kok Thay has clearly emerged from the shadow of his famous father, Lim Goh Tong, who founded the sole casino group in predominantly Muslim Malaysia four decades ago.

The younger Lim has shed his shy persona and is firmly in charge of the sprawling Genting group, which will make its biggest investment ever in Singapore should it clinch the licence to develop the second integrated resort with casino on Sentosa at a cost of more than $5 billion.

His new-found confidence is reflected in his markedly different management style from his 89-year-old father, who passed the baton to his second son four years ago. The younger Mr Lim is also ready to talk more about his family - one of the richest in Malaysia - whose wealth tops US$2 billion.

For a start, Mr Lim, 54, is less averse to resorting to borrowing to help the Genting group expand in the global arena, quite the opposite of his father, whose distaste for bank loans is well-known.

'He started from scratch and built a local business and gave us a good platform to springboard from,' the younger Mr Lim tells BT during a three-hour conversation in his Singapore office at Park Mall last week.

'Going global needs a different set of skills and mindset - one of which is more risk.'

'You need to gear up more. My father would be dead against not just over-gearing, even gearing,' he explains.

He quips: 'He's losing more sleep than I, worrying about my gearing!'

But Mr. Lim's company is nowhere near over-geared. Although borrowings of once debt-free KL-listed Genting Bhd have more than doubled to RM2.5 billion (S$1.1 billion) since he took over full control from his father, its gearing ratio is low at less than one-third of its shareholders' equity. The only exception is capital-intensive Star Cruises, which is still going through a rapid expansion phase.

Such is the confidence of the new casino kingpin, who learnt the ropes in the casino business quite early on. He was about 17 when his father clinched the casino licence against all odds in the mid-1960s.

Being closely involved with his father's business for the last three decades, he has naturally honed his business acumen. Like his father, Mr Lim is a visionary businessman with big business ideas and the same never-say-die trait.

He wants Genting to be one of the three gaming giants in terms of revenue with a global, rather than regional, footprint. 'We can achieve our vision even without Singapore. Of course, with Singapore, it becomes an even stronger network,' he declares.

A strong foundation in the family business has helped Mr Lim oversee Malaysia's most popular tourist destination ever since he graduated with a Bachelor of Science (Civil Engineering) from University of London in 1975. He obtained a management degree from Harvard Graduate Business School in 1979.

One of his early tasks was the migration of the casino from the basement of a small hotel to a bigger hotel at the Genting Highlands resort, which is located 58 km from the Malaysian capital.

The father of three doesn't hold back when discussing the fortunes of the group, which has a total market capitalisation exceeding RM50 billion, with assets in Malaysia, Singapore, Hong Kong and the United Kingdom.

They include the Malaysian casino and resort business under Resorts World; regional cruise business under Star Cruises; newly acquired UK gaming and casino business under Stanley Leisure and Maxims; Malaysian plantation under Asiatic Development; power generators in Malaysia, India and China; and oil and gas exploration ventures.

Two common themes are still present in all the group's new business considerations - high capital expenditure to ensure high barriers to entry, and an expected internal rate of return of at least 15 per cent for each business segment. Mr Lim says he won't look at projects that generate returns of less than 15 per cent.

One of his biggest bets was Star Cruises. He convinced his father to take the plunge into the cruise business in the early 1990s, instead of ploughing the group's earnings into their hotel business. The senior Lim agreed after they witnessed the tourism appeal of cruise liners in the Bahamas and Miami. The Lims felt more Asians would turn to cruises as a form of recreation as their income rose.

Their bet turned out to be correct. From an initial pair of small ships acquired from a troubled Swedish ferry operator, Star Cruises has emerged as the third largest cruise operator in the world with a combined fleet of 20 ships.

But the rapid expansion has come at a hefty cost. Star Cruises, which is listed in Hong Kong and quoted on Singapore's Clob International, has seen its borrowings balloon to nine times its Ebitda (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization), according to rating agency Standard & Poor's.

S&P has given Star Cruises a BB- rating, which is considered junk status due to its risky credit profile. Ratings of BB and below are considered junk or risky to credit rating companies, which assign ratings of BBB and above to healthier borrowers.

Star Cruises' highly leveraged position has naturally raised questions about its ability to partner sister company Genting International for the Sentosa project, which will require fresh borrowings of at least $3 billion.

But Mr Lim is unperturbed, citing Star Cruises' continued ability to service its debts. High gearing is necessary to help the young company keep up with more established rivals such as Royal Caribbean and Carnival, he argues. 'I don't set the pace in the cruise business. If I don't follow I will be left far behind,' he says.

He is proud of the group's overall financial strength despite the borrowing weight on Star Cruises, saying that bankers are quite happy with the core business of the group.

For instance, Genting Bhd - the ultimate holding company of the conglomerate - is accorded a strong rating of BBB+ by S&P. 'All gaming companies are junk except Genting,' Mr Lim declares.

And Mr Lim pooh-poohs nagging perception that Genting is a third-rate resort owner in Malaysia. 'People say we are a Third World gaming facility but how come we have first-class rating?' he argues.

He is also banking on the group's impeccable track record to help clinch the Sentosa IR project. 'We believe we have presented an iconic bid,' he says, heaping praises on its world-class partners and renowned American architect Michael Graves.

Mr Lim believes he has two trump cards - the partnership with movie and theme park icon Universal Studios and DreamWorks, a movie animation company co-founded by legendary Hollywood director Steven Spielberg.

He says Genting would not have been able to team up with such big names if it had remained a domestic business. 'If you had not gone global, people like Universal and Spielberg will say: 'Who are you?'' he says.

Mr Lim says DreamWorks - responsible for blockbusters such as Madagascar, Shark Tale and Shrek 2 - will be a 'catalyst' in the Genting-Universal blueprint for the 49-ha Sentosa IR project.

In a statement to BT, DreamWorks disclosed that its digital animation studios - with a floor area of 1,400 square metres - will 'give visitors a peek 'behind the scenes' to learn how film animators are using state-of-the-art computer technology to create some of today's most popular films.'

More importantly, the new Genting chief feels that it will be a breeze for his consortium to make good the promise to deliver up to 10 million people to Sentosa to help Singapore exceed its tourism target of 17 million visitors by 2015. Under 10 million tourists visit Singapore currently.

'I don't think anyone else can boast about such actual numbers,' he says, adding, as an example, that Singapore will almost achieve its tourism target overnight should Genting and partners shift a mere 10 per cent of their current customer base to Singapore.

Genting, Stanley Leisure and Star Cruises catered to nearly 25 million local and foreign visitors last year - more than the 17 million tourists to Malaysia last year. Universal's theme parks in Orlando, Los Angeles, Japan and Spain collectively attracted more than 46 million visitors last year.

But Mr Lim is not interested in simply shifting the cards around. He says he wants to create a brand new world-class destination that will compete with the best resorts in the world for new visitors.

The odds are in his favour. Analysts have touted Genting as the front-runner for the Sentosa project despite stiff competition from CapitaLand-Kerzner and Eighth Wonder. Genting and CapitaLand both failed to clinch the Marina Bay IR project earlier this year.

Clinching Sentosa will definitely be a boost to Genting although it may affect its own highlands casino on the border of the Malaysian states of Selangor and Pahang, analysts say.

But it may be no bad thing if its highlands casino is affected. Perhaps mindful of the perennial call by some Muslim politicians to shut down the sole legal casino in the country, Mr Lim says the group plans to reduce its dependence on its Malaysian gaming business over time by constantly diversifying into other businesses.

Although he has played a key role in turning Genting into a global player, he still sticks to his father's simple philosophy in life. 'Reputation and trust are more important than money,' he says.

The new casino tycoon adds: 'We cannot create the wrong impression. Once we create the wrong impression, it will continue to haunt us.'

The savvy gambler

THE second son of Malaysian casino tycoon Lim Goh Tong readily admits that he is a gambler.

'Life is full of gambles but I'm not a hard-core gambler,' quipped Lim Kok Thay (right in the pix), who took over the helm of the Genting group following his father's retirement four years ago. Instead, the social gambler has turned the Malaysian gaming business into a fine art due to his passion for the business.

Kok Thay, 54, is the only child of the patriarch who has remained in the huge group. A relative in the group is Justin Leong, who is the son of Kok Thay's sister Siew Lian. Mr Leong is head of the group's strategic investments and corporate affairs.

Younger brother Chee Wah, who was once the joint managing director of Genting with their father in the early 1990s, is now running Hong Kong-listed property investment and financial services company VXL Capital.

Chee Wah apparently quit Genting due to differences with their father but Kok Thay dismisses the rumour, saying his brother preferred to dabble in other businesses.

Eldest brother Tee Keong quit as Genting director in the late 1990s. He was subsequently embroiled in a messy suit with two partners over personal stock market losses of over RM38 million (S$16.3 million).

There are also three girls in the family. One of them, Siew Kim, controls listed property company Metroplex, which has been mired in debt since the late 1990s. Genting did not bail out Metroplex despite the family ties.

Genting's success story must be partly attributed to Kok Thay although the empire was founded by his father four decades ago when he clinched a casino licence unexpectedly.

Analysts like the well-run and professionally managed company. The stock has breached RM30 from a low of RM6.40 during the stock market meltdown in 1998.

While Genting has taken correct bets under Kok Thay, his personal bets have been riskier. For example, Kok Thay gave out US$80 million in personal loans at a high interest rate to the Seneca Indian tribe to build a casino in Niagara Falls and acquired a substantial stake in troubled Malaysian lottery operator Mycom.

But Kok Thay is not taking any unnecessary risk with his listed group or its prized Malaysian casino licence, which has to be renewed quarterly by the Finance Ministry. He refuses to disclose the actual fee for each quarterly renewal of the licence but admits that it is now a 'substantial' amount.

But he does not see it as a hindrance, saying that it helps the group's cashflow to pay the government every three months instead of paying one big lump sum at the end of each year.

Nevertheless, he is constantly scouting for fresh businesses to help cut the group's over-dependence on the Malaysian gaming business, which generates two-thirds of its revenue.

'I gamble socially. But I only take calculated risks in business,' Kok Thay adds.

The Lim Family of Genting

In The Business Times, Singapore, today.

The savvy gambler


THE second son of Malaysian casino tycoon Lim Goh Tong (left in the pix from his autobiography) readily admits that he is a gambler.

'Life is full of gambles but I'm not a hard-core gambler,' quipped Lim Kok Thay (right in the pix), who took over the helm of the Genting group following his father's retirement four years ago. Instead, the social gambler has turned the Malaysian gaming business into a fine art due to his passion for the business.

Kok Thay, 54, is the only child of the patriarch who has remained in the huge group. A relative in the group is Justin Leong, who is the son of Kok Thay's sister Siew Lian. Mr Leong is head of the group's strategic investments and corporate affairs.

Younger brother Chee Wah, who was once the joint managing director of Genting with their father in the early 1990s, is now running Hong Kong-listed property investment and financial services company VXL Capital.

Chee Wah apparently quit Genting due to differences with their father but Kok Thay dismisses the rumour, saying his brother preferred to dabble in other businesses.

Eldest brother Tee Keong quit as Genting director in the late 1990s. He was subsequently embroiled in a messy suit with two partners over personal stock market losses of over RM38 million (S$16.3 million).

There are also three girls in the family. One of them, Siew Kim, controls listed property company Metroplex, which has been mired in debt since the late 1990s. Genting did not bail out Metroplex despite the family ties.

Genting's success story must be partly attributed to Kok Thay although the empire was founded by his father four decades ago when he clinched a casino licence unexpectedly.

Analysts like the well-run and professionally managed company. The stock has breached RM30 from a low of RM6.40 during the stock market meltdown in 1998.

While Genting has taken correct bets under Kok Thay, his personal bets have been riskier. For example, Kok Thay gave out US$80 million in personal loans at a high interest rate to the Seneca Indian tribe to build a casino in Niagara Falls and acquired a substantial stake in troubled Malaysian lottery operator Mycom.

But Kok Thay is not taking any unnecessary risk with his listed group or its prized Malaysian casino licence, which has to be renewed quarterly by the Finance Ministry. He refuses to disclose the actual fee for each quarterly renewal of the licence but admits that it is now a 'substantial' amount.

But he does not see it as a hindrance, saying that it helps the group's cashflow to pay the government every three months instead of paying one big lump sum at the end of each year. Nevertheless, he is constantly scouting for fresh businesses to help cut the group's over-dependence on the Malaysian gaming business, which generates two-thirds of its revenue. 'I gamble socially. But I only take calculated risks in business,' Kok Thay adds.