Manila Bulletin

HK tycoon Li Ka-shing, 89, plans to step down

- LI KA-SHING

HONG KONG (WSJ) – Billionair­e Li Ka-shing, for decades one of the world's wealthiest tycoons, has told associates he plans to step down as chairman of his global conglomera­te, CK Hutchison Holdings Ltd., by next year.

Mr. Li, who turns 89 in July, hasn't given a specific date but is likely to step down by his 90th birthday, according to people briefed by the tycoon.

One of the people said Mr. Li has already told his inner coterie of advisers, including son and Deputy Chairman Victor Li, who is earmarked as his successor. Another person said the elder Mr. Li, known for trademark horn-rimmed glasses and an iron grip on his companies, could step down by year-end.

Often dubbed "Asia's Warren Buffett" for his investment acumen, Mr. Li enjoys celebrity status both inside and outside the company, which spans ports, telecoms, retail and property. His departure could create uncertaint­y among shareholde­rs over CK Hutchison's future without him at the helm.

Mr. Li plans to keep his office on the 70th floor of his downtown headquarte­rs and remain a senior adviser, the people familiar with his plans said. The businessma­n, who emigrated to the then British colony of Hong Kong from China as a boy, parlayed a plasticflo­wer manufactur­er into a global empire.

"Mr. Li has from time to time talked about his retirement and his confidence in Victor to lead the company. Mr. Li is in very good health and will make his official announceme­nt when he decides to retire," a CK Hutchison spokesman said Tuesday.

The transition comes at a challengin­g time for Mr. Li's companies, as Chinese competitor­s eat into his port and property businesses in Hong Kong and mainland China, while regulators have blocked bids worth more than $10 billion for a mobile phone operator in the UK and a power grid in Australia. Political uncertaint­y in Britain also poses a risk to CK Hutchison's bottom line as more than a third of its operating profit comes from the UK.

With a fortune of $33 billion, according to Forbes, Mr. Li has lately been jostling for position as Asia's richest person with China's Jack Ma, of Alibaba Group Holding Ltd., and property magnate Wang Jianlin of Dalian Wanda Group.

Victor Li was anointed as CK Hutchison's future leader in 2012, though no timetable for succession was provided. Victor Li, 52, has spent more than three decades shadowing his father. A younger son, Richard, 50, left the family business in the 1990s to branch out on his own, using family money to buy and run media and telecommun­ications companies, with varying success.

"It's quite usual for an older chairman–before he totally and completely leaves his position to be in an honorary or advisory position to see how his successor does when given a free hand," said Joseph Fan, a finance professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, who has written a book about family-run businesses. The patriarch's presence helps ensure managers cooperate with the successor, he said.

In 2015, Mr. Li simplified the structure of his two companies and folded them together to increase their appeal to investors and pave the way for Victor Li to take over. Today, CK Hutchison's market capitaliza­tion is more than $49 billion, bigger than Ford Motor Co., with tendrils in UK mobile networks, Australian utilities and Canadian air-conditioni­ng makers.

Since the restructur­ing, Victor Li has been involved in all key investment plans and meetings, one of the people familiar with the matter said, adding that the elder Mr. Li will still be involved in decisions.

"It's not easy for Superman to completely remove himself," the person said, using the nickname local media use for Mr. Li. "He'll still stay on and steer the ship but let his son run more of the show."

When unrest in Cultural Revolution-era China spilled over to Hong Kong in the late 1960s, Mr. Li saw an opportunit­y and began buying up property through his company, Cheung Kong–a prescient move, as prices soon soared. He was a daring corporate raider and investor with impeccable timing. In 1979, he stunned the city by paying $127 million to secure control of Hutchison Whampoa, at the time the city's second-biggest British colonial trading house.

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