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The Li Ka Shing Foundation was established in 1980 with a focus on education, medical services and research initiatives. To date, Li Ka-shing has invested over HK$30 billion in projects covering education, medical services, charity and anti-poverty programmes, with about 80% of the projects in mainland China and Hong Kong.
Airwallex, the fintech unicorn backed by Tencent Holdings and tycoon Li Ka-shing's Horizons Ventures, said its valuation soared to US$5.5 billion following its latest oversubscribed round of ...
Li Ka-shing: $37.3 billion CK Hutchison Holdings: 2: Lee Shau Kee: $27.7 billion Henderson Land Development: 3: Robin Zeng: $22.9 billion CATL: 4: Peter Woo: $15.1 billion Wheelock & Co, The Wharf (Holdings) 5: Joseph Lau: $13.1 billion Chinese Estates Holdings: 6: Kwong Siu-hing: $12 billion Sun Hung Kai Properties: 7: Lui Che-woo: $11.2 billion
Hong Kong's richest man Li Ka-shing will donate HK$1 billion ($128 million) to support local small and medium sized businesses, his foundation said on Friday, a move that comes as the city's ...
As of 2018, Li Ka-shing and Lee Shau-kee were ranked first and second in Forbes' Hong Kong's 50 Richest respectively, while Thomas and Raymond Kwok brothers, sons of the late Kwok Tak-seng, were ranked 4th; their eldest brother, Walter Kwok (d. 20 October 2018), was ranked 10th. Richard Li, the younger son of Li Ka-shing, was ranked 19th.
The Li Ka-shing Family refers to a wealthy family based in Hong Kong but with business interests worldwide. The family empire was started by Li Ka-shing , a wealthy Hong Kong entrepreneur who has long been Hong Kong's wealthiest individual and one of the wealthiest in the world.
Li Ka-shing considers the Li Ka Shing Foundation to be his "third son" and has pledged to donate one-third of his assets to support philanthropic projects. He has called for other Asian entrepreneurs to do the same, in the hope of altering the traditional notion of passing wealth through lineage. [1]
Some people blamed Li Ka-shing for Hong Kong Observatory's insistence of not issuing a single No. 8 Storm Signal from 2005 to 2006. Li's field (Chinese: 李氏力場) is a satirical conspiracy theory in Hong Kong over the existence of a force field that repels tropical cyclones from the city.