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Top 10 richest people on VN stock market in H1
 
By July 22, Vu’s HSG shares were valued are held VND1.757 trillion, doublingthe figure of late 2012. Stock price increase in the first half of the year also helped some others climb up in the Top 10, such as Mr. Tran Dinh Long (Hoa Phat Group) or Ms. Pham Thuy Hang (Vingroup).
1. Pham Nhat Vuong
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Company: Vingroup
2012 ranking: 1
Assets in 2012: VND17,184 billion
Current assets: VND18,073 billion
In the first half of 2013, Vingroup (share code: VIC) conducted big affairs: selling the Vincom Center A opened, opening Vincom MegaMall Royal City and Vincome MegalMall Times City. Most recently, the group attracted $150 million of Warburg Pincus for a project.
In the first quarter, the business activities of Vingroup was not very optimistic when after-tax profit decreased by 60 percent compared to the same period last year, reaching only VND264.6 billion. Net revenue fell nearly VND900 billion to VND984 billion.
March of this year, Mr. Vuong was named by Forbes as Vietnam’s first USD billionaire with the positive reviews.
2. Doan Nguyen Duc
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Company: Hoang Anh Gia Lai
2012 ranking: 2
Assets in 2012: VND5,297 billion
Current assets: VND6,730 billion
Chairman of Hoang Anh Gia Lai Group (HAGL) – Mr. Doan Nguyen Duc still maintains the second place in the Top ten, holding more than 311 million HAG shares, an increase of 52 million compared to the end of 2012.
In the first quarter of 2013, HAGL’s pretax profit rose by nearly 9 percent, to VND107.4 billion. Meanwhile, revenue fell by 17 percent, to only VND722 billion. The fields that brought money for HAGL are minerals and sales of products and goods with VND111 billion and VND419 billion respectively.
In the first half of the year, Duc experienced different emotions in business as well as public pressure. When he wanted to promote overseas business, especially in Indochina, an international organization accused him of appropriating land and destroying forest in Cambodia and Laos. Then he gave evidence to counter this.
3. Pham Thu Huong
Company: Vingroup
2012 ranking: 3
Assets in 2012: VND2,963 billion
Current assets: VND3,116 billion
Huong is the vice president of Vingroup and the wife of Pham Nhat Vuong. Compared to the end of 2012, the Vingroup shares owned by Huong increased by 12 million shares because the group further increased its capital.
4. Tran Dinh Long
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Company: Hoa Phat Group
2012 ranking: 5
Assets in 2012: VND2.122 billion
Current assets: VND3,102 billion
Long is Chairman of Hoa Phat Group (HPG). Long holds more than 101 million shares. In the first quarter of 2013, Hoa Phat’s revenue reached VND4,000 billion, down 4 percent compared to the same period in 2012. However, thanks to theincrease of revenue from financial operations and the reduction of financing costs, the group’s net profit reached VND480 billion, an increase of 140 percent compared to the same period in 2012.
5. Nguyen Hoang Yen
Company: Masan Group
2012 ranking: 4
Assets in 2012: VND2,221 billion
Current assets: VND2,112 billion
Yen is a member of the Executive Board of Masan Group (MSN). Not including the ESOP shares that were just released by Masan, Yen currently holds nearly 22 million MSN shares. By July 22, MSN price reached VND97,000 per share.
Net revenue of Masan in the first quarter decreased slightly compared to the same period in 2012, with nearly VND1,534 billion. However, its financial revenue fell sharply, management and sale costs increases, making the Group’s net profit dropped by 90 percent compared to the same period in 2012, to VND51.5 billion.
Other business activities brought about VND80 billion, but with the nearly VND15 billion loss from its associated companies, plus the huge taxes, Masan’s after-tax profit was only over VND35 billion, down by 92 percent year on year. This is also the lowest profit in a quarter of the company from 2009.
6. Pham Thuy Hang
Company: Vingroup
Rank in 2012: 6
Assets in 2012: VND1,979 billion
Current assets: VND2,081 billion
In the top 10 richest people in the stock market in the first half of 2013, Mr. Pham Nhat Vuong’s family is again mentioned when his sister – Ms. Pham Thuy Hang ranked fifth, up one spot from the end of 2012 . Hang is now vice president of Vingroup.
7. Le Phuoc Vu
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Company: Hoa Sen Iron Group
2012 ranking: 16
Assets in 2012: VND823 billion
Current assets: VND1,748 billion
Vu is currently the Chairman of Hoa Sen Group (HSG), owns 43 million shares of HSG. HSG price has doubled from the level at the beginning of the year, reaching VND40,800/share on July 22, adding Vu to the top 10 richest people onthe stock market.
8. Ho Hung Anh
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Company: Masan Group
Rank in 2012: 7
Assets in 2012: VND1,608
Current assets: VND1.529 billion
Hung Anh is currently Chairman of the Vietnam Technological and Commercial Bank (Techcombank) and also Vice Chairman of Masan Group. Hung holds about 16 million MSN shares, not taking into account the ESOP shares that Masan released recently.
9. Ha Van Tham
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Company: Ocean Group
Rank in 2012: 8
Assets in 2012: VND1,364 billion
Current assets: VND1,410 billion
Tham is the President of the Ocean Group (OGC). He holds 133 million OGC shares. In the first quarter of 2013, the Ocean Group earne net revenue of VND306.4 billion, up 34.5 percent year on year. However, its financial expenses, sale expenses and management costs increased simultaneously, making VND4.2 billion loss to the Ocean Group. Last year’s first quarter, the company earned net profit of VND19.3 billion.
10. Dang Thanh Tam
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Company: Saigon Telecommunication Technology JSC and Kinh Bac Urban Development Corporation
2012 ranking: 13
Assets in 2012: VND897 billion
Current assets: VND1,097 billion
Tam owns large numbers of shares of ITA, KBC, SGT and NVB. Thanks to theincrease of ITA and KBC by 20-30 percent, his assets also increased by more than VND200 billion even though the number of shares does not change. This result helped him back to the Top 10 richest people in the stock market after a year of absence. He previously led the list of 100 richest people on the stock market in 2007 and was in the top 10 until 2012.    
Business results in the first half of 2013 of the two companies with Tam as chairman – Kinh Bac Urban Development Company (KBC) and Saigon Telecommunication Technology JSC (SGT) were not very good.
Kinh Bac incurred after-tax loss of VND55 billion in the first quarter. Saigontel involved in a dispute with the Vietnam Multimedia Communications Corporation. In the first quarter, Saigontel earned only VND492 million of after-tax profit, its net sales decreased by 77 percent year on year, reaching only VND4 billion.
 
Source: Vietnam Breaking News

(http://www.vietnambreakingnews.com/2013/07/top-10-richest-people-on-vn-stock-market-in-h1/)

10 richest
li ka shing
Rags To Riches: How Li-Ka Shing Went From Factory Worker To The Richest Person In Asia
 
When Li Ka-Shing was just 14 years old, his father died of tuberculosis. In order to earn money for his family, Li was forced to abandon school and take a job at a plastics factory. The family was so poor that Le actually had to sell his dead father's clothes for cash to pay for food. While most of his piers attended school or played games, Li labored away for 16 hours a day making plastic watchbands. Sounds terrible, right? Well if it makes you feel any better, today Li Ka-Shing is the richest person in Asia with a personal net worth of $30 billion. In fact, thanks to some extremely shrewd investments, he has been a billionaire for over a quarter of a century! Li Ka-Shing's rise to obscene levels of wealth and power is a truly inspirational rags to riches story.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Rags to Riches: Li-Ka Shing
Li Ka-Shing was born on June 13, 1928 in Chaozhou, Guangdong, China. While Li was in elementary school, it was a common occurrence for the Japanese to drop bombs on Chaozhu, so his family took refuge in Hong Kong. Li's father was a school principal, but tragically succumbed to tuberculosis shortly after the family arrived and settled in their new adopted home country.
Li was also infected with tuberculosis. The isolation during this recovery, coupled with such extreme poverty and feelings of helplessness, had a deep impact on Li Ka-Shing. Dealing with a war, the loss of a parent, severe illness, and poverty all before the age of 15, instilled a lifelong drive to succeed beyond into the future tycoon.
As we mentioned earlier, Li was forced to quit school at the age of 15 to work as an apprentice in a factory that made plastic watch straps. By the time we was 14, he had a full time job in a plastics trading company and was a big help in supporting his family. In 1950, at the age of 22, Li quit his job to start his own company that made plastic toys. The company soon changed shifted plans and instead began producing plastic flowers because he heard how popular they were in Italy. It was Li's first savvy business decision. He named this company Cheung Kong. Fast forward to the present and Cheung Kong is one of the largest real estate investment companies in the world.
Around this same time, Li began buying apartment buildings and factories throughout Hong Kong with every extra penny he manged to save. Because this was a period of severe social unrest marked by Maoist-led riots and bombings, Li often able to purchase real estate at steep discounts. By the time the market recovered from the social instability, Li started to make a killing. In 1979 he became the first Chinese citizen to acquire a controlling stake in an old British trading house, Hutchison Whampoa. Because Hutchison Whampoa had been struggling for years, Li shrewdly convinced Hongkong & Shanghai Bank (HSBC) to sell him their 22% stake in the company for less than half the book value. Hutchison Whampoa owned shipyards, docks, vast parcels of retail space and much more, mainly throughout Hong Kong. Over the next decade, Li managed to successfully turn Hutchison Whampoa around and expand its empire throughout the world. Today, Hutchison Whampoa is one of the most valuable companies in the world with annual revenues of over $50 billion.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Li-Ka Shing and Michael Bloomberg
Fun fact: Li's office at the top of Cheung Kong Center in central Hong Kong has a private pool and one of the fastest elevators in the world. You can ascend 70 stories in less than 45 seconds.
By 1987, Li had transformed himself from factory worker to full fledged billionaire. That same year, Li and his partners paid $500 million to acquire roughly half of Husky Oil, a Canadian company that consistently lost money and had been through many restructurings and mergers. The timing of this acquisition could not have been any more perfect. At the time of the purchase, a barrel of oil traded for roughly $10. Over the next thirty years, a single barrel rose from $10, to $30, to $50 to an all time high of $140. Today, a single barrel of oil sells for $93 which helps Husky Energy generate over $25 billion a year in revenue. Li still has a stake in the company which is worth over $8 billion on its own.
Throughout his life, Li continued to invest in real estate and a diverse range of other industries. Li's companies handle 70% of Hong Kong's port traffic, have huge stakes in the electric companies and mobile phone services—in a way, you could say he controls Hong Kong from the top of his tower. But beyond real estate, Li Ka-Shing has shown an uncanny perception for the tech-world. The octogenarian took about five minutes in late 2007 to decide to invest $120 million in Facebook. Keep in mind that back in 2007, Facebook barely made any money. It had only recently opened up to membership beyond college students, and Myspace had just proven to be a disastrous investment for Rupert Murdoch's Newscorp. Today, that 0.8% stake in Facebook is worth $900 million.
Li also invested in Skype in 2005 when it was losing money. A year later, eBay paid $2.5 billion for it. Li also backed Siri, which, as we all know was bought by Apple in 2010. Li is also invested millions of dollars into Spotify, Waze and HzO. Oh and by the way, after he invested in Spotify, he reportedly told the company Spotify needed to be in his car. This was 2009, long before Spotify had a mobile app. Li's technology investments display a particular brilliance with understand not just where the tech world is, but where it is going. He believes in technology that is a game changer. Things like Facebook, Waze, Siri, etc. His investments have been so savvy, that people began referring to Li-Ka Shing as "Superman". He is even frequently depicted as so in newspapers and magazines:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
But Li still invests in more traditional business as well. In fact in 2010, Li Ka-Shing's Cheung Kong made its biggest acquisition to date when it bought U.K. Power Networks for $9.1 billion. This means that Li now supplies about eight million Brits with power. In 2011, Li bought Northumbrian Water, which ferries clean drinking water to 4.5 million people in England and provides sewerage services to another 2.7 million.
Basically, wherever you look, Li Ka-Shing is there in some way. Or so it seems. When Li's tech investments don't pan out, he personally takes the financial hit. When the tech investments hit a windfall, he puts the profits into his Li Ka-Shing Foundation, which he refers to as his third son. The foundation has donated more than $1.6 billion, mostly to education. He has given $690 million to create Shantou University. He donated $40 million to Berkeley for a new biomedical research facility.
At 83, he is still quite a force to be reckoned with. Every day, Li practices golf for 90 minutes and by lunchtime he has typically read through every single major international newspaper from back to front. He wakes up each morning at 5am and lives in the same home he bought more than 50 years ago. Li-Ka Shing is press shy and rarely grants interviews but his wealth is legendary in Hong Kong, and globally. He has two sons, and his eldest, Victor is the heir apparent. His younger son Richard runs his own telecom business. Li's wife died of a heart attack in 1990 when she was 56-years old. He never remarried.
Today, thanks largely to his majority stakes in Cheung Kong, Hutchison Whampoa and various other investment, Li-Ka Shing is worth $30 billion. That's far and away enough to make him the richest person in Asia and the 18th richest person in the world! Not bad for a former dirt poor factory worker!
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Source: Celebrity Networth

(http://www.celebritynetworth.com/articles/entertainment-articles/rags-riches-li-ka-shing-went-factory-worker-richest-person-asia/)

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