Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
DWF further opened in Singapore after hiring from Eversheds Sutherland's practice. It gained bases in Sydney, Chicago and Toronto after the acquisition of claims company Triton in January. [19] DWF posted strong results for H1 2017/18, with revenue up 23% and net profit growing by circa 33%.
Watson Farley & Williams opened an office in Hong Kong, in association with Lau, Leong & Co., in March 2012. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] [ dead link ] Watson Farley & Williams opened an office in Frankfurt in January 2013 with a regulatory team focusing on the energy, infrastructure and real estate sectors.
The British Theatre Playhouse (BTP) is a professional theatrical and musical production company incorporated in Singapore in 2004. [1] With the motto Bringing to the World the Best in British Entertainment, the BTP is internationally focused with a British connection, as well as it is a long-standing member of the Singaporean British Chamber of Commerce [2] and the European Chamber of Commerce ...
WFW or WfW may refer to: . Watford West railway station, a disused railway station in Watford, Hertfordshire (National Rail station code); Watson, Farley & Williams, a law firm based in London, UK
Henry Kwee Hian Liong (郭贤良 in Chinese), father of the Kwee brothers, was a Chinese-Indonesian textile trader and real estate developer who migrated from Yuxi Town Fuqing City, Fujian Province, China, to Singapore in 1958. [1] [2] He founded Kwee Inc. Pte Ltd in 1959 and the Pontiac Land Group (PLG) in 1961. [3] Henry Kwee died in 1988. [4]
Fuji Xerox Towers [3] (formerly IBM Towers) was a high-rise skyscraper located in Downtown Core, Singapore. It was located on 80 Anson Road, in the zone of Shenton Way and Tanjong Pagar . The building sat within four roads, namely Tanjong Pagar Road , Bernam Street, Keppel Road and Anson Road.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Donate
HFW was founded in 1883, and its early expertise was representing maritime clients following shipwrecks and collisions. [2] It has since broadened its practice to focus on six core sectors globally: aerospace, commodities, construction, energy and resources, insurance and reinsurance, and shipping.