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Ng Teng Fong mati liao

He aleady died on sun. Today then announce!




'Property king' Mr Ng Teng Fong, 82, died early on Tuesday morning, after suffering a cerebral haemorrhage from a fall. -- PHOTO: ZAOBAO



BILLIONAIRE property magnate Ng Teng Fong, 82, died early Tuesday morning, after suffering a cerebral haemorrhage on Jan 23.
He apparently had a fall and was in a coma. He was taken to hospital and underwent an operation.


Property giant Far East Organization said Mr Ng, the firm's chairman, passed away peacefully.

Busloads of employees arrived at the wake held last night at his long-time family home, called Ng's Mansion.
There was a valet service for guests and there were so many cars at the scene that Cisco police had to be called in to direct traffic and prevent indiscriminate parking.

Among the sea of faces that came to pay their respects last night were many familiar names in the corporate world, such Ms Jannie Tay, executive vice-chairman of watch retailer The Hour Glass, United Overseas Bank chairman Wee Cho Yaw and former top civil servant Ngiam Tong Dow.
Read the full story in Wednesday's edition of The Straits Times
 
I never heard of Ng Teng Fong doing even the least to charity.he's one the crook who made singapore housing at rocket high prices.
 
Re: Singapore's Richest Man Passed Away

Luke 12:15-21 (New International Version)

15Then he said to them, "Watch out! Be on your guard against all kinds of greed; a man's life does not consist in the abundance of his possessions."

16And he told them this parable: "The ground of a certain rich man produced a good crop. 17He thought to himself, 'What shall I do? I have no place to store my crops.'

18"Then he said, 'This is what I'll do. I will tear down my barns and build bigger ones, and there I will store all my grain and my goods. 19And I'll say to myself, "You have plenty of good things laid up for many years. Take life easy; eat, drink and be merry." '

20"But God said to him, 'You fool! This very night your life will be demanded from you. Then who will get what you have prepared for yourself?'

21"This is how it will be with anyone who stores up things for himself but is not rich toward God."



1. bro, bingo and good one too.
2. well, being the richest still cannot "escaped" death.
3. in death, everyone is equal.
 
Re: Singapore's Richest Man Passed Away

This is the type of meritocratic system which the papist leegime produces. Those who become rich are the school dropouts and ex-underworld figures while PhD's end up driving taxis. Ng Teng Fong was an underworld chief during the era when Singapore was infested with gangsters. He was so poor that he has to give up at least two of his daughters for adoption. Now he is the richest man in Singapore. In the early days, he almost went bankrupt in as many times as there were recession in Singapore. Only the miraculous hands of some very powerful people prevented him from falling.

Hey...we need these kinds of mobsters rather than you poor educated peasants because these kinds can be counted upon to do some dirty work for us whenever we need them.

And these kinds do not think too much about morality to whom they give their loyalty to. As long as we feed them, they are like loyal to us like guard dogs. See here, all rich and greedy people have guard dogs to protect their property against attack by you peasants, so this is the same. Without our guard dogs, you people will try to rise up against us to try to wrestle back your money from our clutches. Surely we cannot let that happen, right.

So thats why we have ingeniously created as system that rewards loyalty and NOT talent. We have systematically kill off any talent that we see will be a potential threat. And we also make sure that none of you peasant can be as RICH
as our kaki nang so that you cannot then use your wealth to undermine us and fund the opposition. Thats why you buggers, no matter how talented and how hard working you are, will NEVER get rich here in stinkaput, because we will never allow you moralist buggers to gain control.
 
so steady....no degree...no rich dad.
but
still can bcome the richest man in singapore....other than the fami-lee.


Wonder how these ppl do it.....

:confused: :o :confused:
 
so steady....no degree...no rich dad.
but
still can bcome the richest man in singapore....other than the fami-lee.


Wonder how these ppl do it.....

:confused: :o :confused:


Maybe we should also go to newton and order :



his favourite food at newton : meepok tar mai tow geh !!
 
so steady....no degree...no rich dad.
but
still can bcome the richest man in singapore....other than the fami-lee.


Wonder how these ppl do it.....

:confused: :o :confused:



+++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Business Times - 03 Feb 2010


Property industry loses towering figure



Ng Teng Fong of Far East Organization group dies, aged 82

(SINGAPORE) Property tycoon Ng Teng Fong's passing yesterday marks the end of an era of larger-than-life property titans.

He was one of the earliest to develop shopping centres on Orchard Road and until today, his Far East Organization group here is probably the largest property owner in the island's prime shopping belt. In Hong Kong, he made inroads into one of the world's most competitive property markets, battling local tycoons to establish his Sino Group as one of the biggest developers there.

Market players yesterday recalled the tenacity and resilience of a man who rose from humble beginnings to build a property empire over the past five decades, bouncing back from setbacks along the way, especially the mid-1980s property slump.

Today, Far East Organization and sister outfit Sino Group have a combined annual turnover of US$5.5 billion and total assets of over US$40 billion, according to information on Far East's website. Last September, the Forbes Asia magazine ranked the late Mr Ng as Singapore's richest person, with a fortune said to be US$8 billion (S$11.3 billion).

The 82-year-old suffered a brain haemorrhage on Jan 23 and underwent an operation before he died peacefully yesterday morning, a statement from Far East Organization said. He leaves behind his wife and eight children.

While Mr Ng still kept a keen interest in his business until recently - including determining prices of property launches and land bids - he had handed over the running of his business empire some time ago to his two sons. Elder son Robert is in charge of Sino Group in Hong Kong and younger son Philip oversees the Far East Organization group in Singapore.

Philip Ng, who holds degrees in civil and geotechnical engineering as well as city planning, has over the past decade or so spruced up the company in Singapore and hired many professionals. The group has developed many award-winning buildings.

Mr Ng's wake is being held at Ng's Mansion at 2 Watten Estate, with a nightly service at 8pm. The funeral will be on Saturday.

Many in property circles yesterday mourned the loss of Mr Ng, who they said, together with Kwek Hong Png, the late founder of the Hong Leong Group, was the pioneer of the private property market in Singapore. Mr Kwek died in 1994. His elder son Leng Beng yesterday said Mr Ng's passing was 'an immense loss for the industry and for Singapore'.

'He was a doyen of the property sector. He was a proven authority with a deep understanding of real estate and an innate talent of looking at the property market in a different way.'

United Overseas Bank Group chairman Wee Cho Yaw described Mr Ng as 'an old friend of more than 50 years' who had 'an intuitive flair for reading property cycles'.

CapitaLand Group president and CEO Liew Mun Leong highlighted Mr Ng's successful entry into Hong Kong, 'a very mature and competitive market, decades ahead of others in Singapore'.

'Even the largest property companies in Hong Kong take their hats off to his company in Hong Kong, where it enjoys a high standing,' Mr Liew added.

Redas president Simon Cheong said no other foreign player has entered the Hong Kong market like Mr Ng did. He said Mr Ng's 'master stroke' in Tsim Sha Tsui a few decades ago, mopping up a whole stretch of properties in the district, 'is still being talked about among market players today'.

Mr Ng entered the Hong Kong property market in the 1970s and continued to build his business there in the early 1980s when confidence in Hong Kong was shaken due to disputes on its future between the British government and China.

Admiring the late Mr Ng's acumen, Redas CEO Steven Choo said: 'He saw the enormous prospects for real estate in land-scarce prosperous cities like Singapore and Hong Kong. In Singapore, one of his most enduring legacies is that he laid down the foundation for Singapore's modern shopping street - Orchard Road. We can see the Far East emblem everywhere in Orchard/Scotts roads. Some of his projects were visionary at the time.'

Dr Choo noted that 'Far East has also helped establish condominium living in Singapore, through its continued participation in Government Land Sale tenders'.

Copyright © 2010 Singapore Press Holdings Ltd. All rights reserved.

 
so steady....no degree...no rich dad.
but
still can bcome the richest man in singapore....other than the fami-lee.


Wonder how these ppl do it.....

:confused: :o :confused:




Business Times - 03 Feb 2010


Tributes

Wee Cho Yaw, chairman, United Overseas Bank Group 'Teng Fong was an old friend of more than 50 years. He had an intuitive flair for reading property cycles. I have always admired his acute perception of market forces, an acumen that has made Far East among the most successful property developers in Singapore and Hong Kong. His sudden passing is a great loss to the business community.'

Kwek Leng Beng, executive chairman, Hong Leong Group Singapore 'I knew Mr Ng for a long time, and had the privilege of working closely with him especially when we were active in Redas in the 1980s. I valued his views and benefited from his insights . . . His passing is indeed an immense loss for the industry and for Singapore.'

Liew Mun Leong, president & CEO of CapitaLand Group 'Mr Ng was highly respected as a successful pioneer and veteran in the Singapore real estate industry. We speak with high regard of how he successfully steered his business through several major crises over the decades and built an impressive business empire.

'He has been equally successful in his foray into Hong Kong, a very mature and competitive market, decades ahead of others in Singapore. Such initiatives place Mr Ng Teng Fong as an exceptional property veteran whose entrepreneurship far exceeds many of us in Singapore. Even the largest property companies in Hong Kong take their hats off to his company in Hong Kong where it enjoys a high standing.'

Simon Cheong, president of Real Estate Developers' Association of Singapore 'Mr Ng is indeed a property icon in Singapore . . . We at Redas will indeed miss his presence and guidance. His scale and timing are legendary.'


Copyright © 2010 Singapore Press Holdings Ltd. All rights reserved.

 
so steady....no degree...no rich dad.
but
still can bcome the richest man in singapore....other than the fami-lee.


Wonder how these ppl do it.....

:confused: :o :confused:


Business Times - 03 Feb 2010

OBITUARY: NG TENG FONG
Property was always on his mind

Industry veterans recall his drive and industrious streak

(SINGAPORE) The late Ng Teng Fong, billed as Singapore's richest man by Forbes Asia magazine last September, rose from humble beginnings.

He was just six years old when his family migrated to Singapore from Putian, a village in China's Fujian province. His father set up a soya sauce factory and had a grocery shop in the Jalan Besar area stocking dried goods, preserved and specialty foods from their village.

Mr Ng was inducted at a young age to help out in the family business and did not acquire much formal education in Singapore, according to a short biography of the property tycoon released yesterday by his Singapore-based Far East Organization.

As the eldest of 11 children in the family, expectations were high that Mr Ng should carry on the family business. But he disappointed his father when he decided to strike out on his own in the 1950s, when he was in his 20s.

Mr Ng's first property project back in 1962 was a 72-unit terrace housing development at Jalan Pachelli in the Serangoon Gardens area. In 1969, he developed Watten Estate in the Bukit Timah area. In the 1970s, Mr Ng developed Far East Shopping Centre and Lucky Plaza along Orchard Road, followed by Far East Plaza on Scotts Road in the early 1980s. Since then, the group has developed Orchard Parksuites serviced residences and Orchard Central.

Mr Ng's Far East Organization group is the biggest private property developer in Singapore today. It comprises over 180 private companies and two listed entities - Orchard Parade Holdings and Yeo Hiap Seng.

In the 1970s, Mr Ng entered the Hong Kong property market. Today, the business there is under the Sino Group, which includes public-listed Tsim Sha Tsui Properties, Sino Land and Sino Hotels. Mr Ng was the only Singaporean businessman invited to the historic signing of the Sino-British Joint Declaration by Margaret Thatcher and Zhao Ziyang in December 1984.

Mr Ng's property empire today comprises not only property trading (such as developing apartments for sale) but a sizeable property investment business (comprising completed properties held for recurring rental income).

For instance, Far East is the largest owner-operator of serviced residences and corporate housing in Singapore with 2,400 apartments in its inventory. Far East and Sino have a dozen hotels here and in Hong Kong with over 4,700 rooms. The flagship is The Fullerton Hotel Singapore.

Those who knew Mr Ng recall his industrious streak. 'He was a man who worked extremely hard - day and night,' says Hong Leong Group executive chairman Kwek Leng Beng.

Back in the 1980s when the two men were active in the Real Estate Developers Association of Singapore (Redas), 'we used to study the property market together at his office . . . more often than not, we would find that we were still deep in discussion long after the official Redas meetings were over and everyone else had left', Mr Kwek said.

CB Richard Ellis chairman (Asia) Willy Shee said: 'Mr Ng didn't speak much English but was very sharp and his mind was on property all the time. Even at functions, he did not engage much in social talk but always wanted to know more about the property market and trends. There was never an idle moment for him.'

Another veteran property consultant, Knight Frank chairman Tan Tiong Cheng, reminisces about his first meeting with Mr Ng around 1981. 'He was carrying a worn-out black book in which he was copying notes, doing his calculations,' Mr Tan said.

'He was always focused on property. Even when he bought into Yeo Hiap Seng, he had in mind the land bank it offered rather than just the food and beverage business,' he added.


Copyright © 2010 Singapore Press Holdings Ltd. All rights reserved.
 
so steady....no degree...no rich dad.
but
still can bcome the richest man in singapore....other than the fami-lee.


Wonder how these ppl do it.....

:confused: :o :confused:


http://www.todayonline.com/Singapore/EDC100203-0000121/Property-tycoon-Ng-Teng-Fong-dies




Property tycoon Ng Teng Fong dies
by Neo Chai Chin 05:55 AM Feb 03, 2010SINGAPORE - In chauffeured cars and chartered buses, they came to pay their last respects to Singapore's richest man and entrepreneur extraordinaire.

Property tycoon Ng Teng Fong, 82 (picture), died yesterday morning after suffering cerebral haemorrhage on Jan 23 and undergoing surgery. The Fujian boy who moved to Singapore at the age of six, and founded his Far East Organization empire in the 1960s, was reportedly worth US$8 billion ($11 billion) last year.

At the mansion where he had lived for the past 30 years - an old-fashioned but spacious abode in Watten Estate - at least five busloads of Far East employees arrived in the afternoon as wake preparations were underway to bid their late chairman farewell.

They kept mum when approached by reporters, citing respect for the Ng family's fiercely-guarded privacy - which took its cue from the late magnate's own aversion to the public spotlight.

Later in the evening, some of Mr Ng's contemporaries, including United Overseas Bank chairman Wee Cho Yaw, former Cabinet Minister Yeo Ning Hong and former top civil servant Ngiam Tong Dow, attended the wake at which Cisco auxiliary police and car valets helped to keep things running smoothly.

Paying tribute to Mr Ng's business acumen and work ethic, Mr Kwek Leng Beng, executive chairman of Hong Leong Group Singapore, said: "I knew Mr Ng for a long time and had the privilege of working closely with him especially when we were active in Redas (Real Estate Developers' Association of Singapore) in the 1980s ... We used to study the property market together at his office while we were dealing with property matters.

"More often than not, we would find that we were still deep in discussion long after the official Redas meetings were over and everyone else had left."

Mr Ng was one of 11 children whose father owned a soya sauce factory and ran a Jalan Besar grocery shop. Today, apart from the Far East empire, the Ng family owns 12 hotels here and in Hong Kong, including The Fullerton Hotel Singapore.

Property observers expect Mr Ng's passing to have minimal business impact. "I don't expect a sudden shift in Far East or a change of heads," said Mr Nicholas Mak, a lecturer in real estate at Ngee Ann Polytechnic, told Bloomberg. "His children have been running the company for more than a decade."

Older son Robert Ng is chairman of Hong Kong's Sino Land, while younger son Philip is chief executive of Far East Organization, with daughter Dorothy Chan as executive director.

Mr Ng is survived by his wife and eight children. In a three paragraph statement on his death, the family said a nightly service at his wake would be held at 8pm. The funeral will be held on Saturday.
 
so steady....no degree...no rich dad.
but
still can bcome the richest man in singapore....other than the fami-lee.


Wonder how these ppl do it.....

:confused: :o :confused:

SINGAPORE'S richest man, property magnate Ng Teng Fong died early on Tuesday morning after suffering a cerebral haemorrhage 10 days ago.

A statement from Far East Organisation said that Mr Ng was taken to hospital on Jan 23 where he underwent an operation.

The low-profile, self-made billionaire, who founded privately-held Far East Organisation and the Hong Kong-listed Sino Group, was listed as Singapore's richest man in the Forbes Asia Singapore Rich for the last three successive years, with a net worth of US$8 billion (S$11.3 billion).

He developed more than 700 hotels, commercial malls and private condominiums in Singapore and Hong Kong. His company also controls Singapore-listed food and drinks maker Yeo Hiap Seng, and his best known properties in Singapore include The Fullerton and Orchard Parade Hotel.

Despite his fortune, he led a frugal and unostentatious lifestyle. Although he controlled at least a quarter of Singapore's housing market, Mr Ng lived in the same house in Watten Estate, off Bukit Timah Road, for over 30 years in, and was known to even bring his own lunch on airplanes.

Mr Ng is survived by six children. His oldest son, Mr Robert Ng Chee Siong, built up the real estate business in Hong Kong under the direction of his father and was known to be one of the most aggressive bidders at Hong Kong land auctions in the 1990s. Robert is currently the chairman of Sino Land Group, a position he has held since 1981. Mr Ng's second son, Philip, is in charge of the Singapore businesses.

The wake for Mr Ng will be held from Tuesday evening at Ng's Mansion, 2 Watten Estate. A nightly service will be held at 8pm. The funeral will take place on Saturday.
 
so steady....no degree...no rich dad.
but
still can bcome the richest man in singapore....other than the fami-lee.


Wonder how these ppl do it.....

:confused: :o :confused:




Singapore's richest man Ng Teng Fong dies at 82

He was the head and patriarch of the unlisted Far East Organization. -Reuters, AFP

Tue, Feb 02, 2010
Reuters, AFP

SINGAPORE, Feb 2 (Reuters) - Singapore's richest man and property tycoon Ng Teng Fong died early on Tuesday after suffering a cerebral haemorrhage on Jan. 23, a spokeswoman for his family business said. He was 82.

Related story:
» Employees, tycoons pay respects to 'property king'
» Singapore's 40 richest in 2009
The 82-year-old founder of privately held Far East Organization suffered a brain haemorrhage on January 23 and underwent an operation before he passed away peacefully in Singapore, a company press release said.

Ng was the head and patriarch of the unlisted Far East Organization, one of the three largest developers in Singapore alongside CapitaLand and City Developments.

He was also the founder of Hong Kong developer Sino Land, which is now headed by his son Robert Ng.

Far East Organization and its Hong Kong-based sister company Sino Group comprise one of Asia's biggest property groups, with a combined annual turnover of 5.5 billion dollars and total assets valued at more than 40 billion dollars, the company website said.

It is the largest private residential landlord and one of the biggest owner-operators of hotels in Singapore, with two publicly listed companies, hotel operator Orchard Parade Holdings and beverage firm Yeo Hiap Seng.

Forbes magazine said in September last year that Ng was Singapore's richest man with a net worth of $8 billion.

He was ranked as the world's 87th richest.
 
In the early morning during the new year, I blur blur and accidentally stepped on a cockcroach in the toilet when I woke up to pee pee at 12:01am in the morning.

One of the lowest life form in Singapore had died tragically during the first minute on the first day of 2010 under my foot.

Is this a good or bad omen For Singapore???

At the beginning of 2010 already SGP richest man mati, is it bad omen for the rich in SGP?:confused::rolleyes:
 
so steady....no degree...no rich dad.
but
still can bcome the richest man in singapore....other than the fami-lee.


Wonder how these ppl do it.....

:confused: :o :confused:


The "offical" press ain't going to reveal the real truth lah.

Heard that he would bid high for the good property sites & then make up for it by using cheap labor, cheap materials,....for their projects.

Ask anyone who has bought a Far East property can they'll can tell you about the cheap quality materials used. This is confirmed when you talk to the suppliers who will tell you that Far East sources the cheapest :rolleyes:


Any leftovers from one contruction project are used on the next. Tenants in their commercial projects have to use a Far East contractor to do renovations.

As for being the richest man, isn't the richest man the owner of Spore :confused:
 
Today alone i counted 71/2 pages of his obituary.
SPH employees get big 'ang pow' from him.
 
When you-know-who passes away, there will be a special edition of obituary. SPH employees will be crying and holding a calculator at the same time!
 
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