Forbes Asia - April 2018 PDF
Forbes Asia - April 2018 PDF
Forbes Asia - April 2018 PDF
B E I J I N G C A N N E S C H E N G D U D U B A I E K AT E R I N B U R G G E N E VA G S TA A D H O N G K O N G K U A L A L U M P U R L A S V E G A S L O N D O N L O S A N G E L E S
M A C A O M I L A N M O S C O W N E W Y O R K N I N G B O P A R I S S E O U L S H A N G H A I S I N G A P O R E TA I P E I T O K Y O V I E N N A Z U R I C H – W W W. B R E G U E T. C O M
PROMOTION
V3 GROUP:
FROM STRENGTH TO STRENGTH
Following the success of its lagship product OSIM massage chairs, the Singaporean retailer aims to become
Asia’s leading luxury lifestyle and wellness group through its portfolio of premium brands.
Starting with a small retail company that sold flagship line of OSIM premium massage that manufactures high-quality store fixtures
household goods in 1980, an ambitious Sin- chairs. Over the years, the brand has crafted a for leading global brands such as Victoria's
gaporean entrepreneur has grown a business reputation for innovation across its compre- Secret and H&M. Given V3’s emphasis on store
that today spans a range of leading lifestyle hensive range of products, winning numer- design and delivering a premium retail expe-
and wellness brands available in 24 countries ous industry awards for design and business rience, Futuristic is set to bring synergies by
around the world. excellence, including the prestigious Red Dot offering valuable insight on trends and devel-
Throughout the 1980s and early 1990s, Design Award four times. opments in branding and store presentation.
Ron Sim built a regional firm selling health His entrepreneurial achievements have All of V3’s offerings enjoy strong brand rec-
and wellness products in Hong Kong, Taiwan, also led to personal honors. In 2003, he won ognition in their core markets and together
Malaysia and China after the recession in 1985 Ernst & Young's prestigious "Entrepreneur of have a presence in more than 100 cities
made it clear that he needed to grow beyond The Year" award in Singapore. That same year, worldwide. With continuous innovation,
the Singapore market to thrive. Singapore-based The Business Times named high-quality products and focus on customer
The company, which was renamed OSIM him “Businessman of the Year.” experience, V3 has become a brand creator
International in 1993, expanded rapidly The company survived the 1997 Asian and developer in lifestyle and wellness.
following the phenomenal success of its financial crisis and 2008 global financial crisis, "You have to create and make that differ-
emerging stronger each time on the strength ence. Besides brand positioning, you have
of its brands and a commitment to financial to have good concepts, good design, good
prudence. material, at the right price," says Mr. Sim,
With the OSIM product line providing a the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
solid foundation for the firm, Mr. Sim has of V3.
expanded his portfolio of brands through a It is a philosophy that is practiced at all the
series of acquisitions over the past 15 years. group's brands, and one that will drive its con-
He renamed his company V3 Group in 2016. tinued success for years to come.
The company's vision is to become Asia's
leading luxury group in the lifestyle and well-
ness business categories as well as aspira-
tional brands.
Apart from OSIM in the lifestyle category,
V3’s portfolio also includes TWG Tea, in which
the group initially acquired a 35% stake in
2011 and subsequently upped its holding to
70% in 2014. TWG Tea has expanded to more
than 60 tea salons & boutiques worldwide,
and is now recognized as one of the finest
luxury tea brands in the world. To ensure the
quality of its products, TWG Tea tasters travel OSIM uInfinity Luxe
thousands of miles across the globe every
year, sampling hundreds of teas in search of
the best harvests direct from the source.
In 2003, Mr. Sim acquired ONI Global, which
holds the exclusive franchise rights to the
GNC brand in Singapore, Malaysia and Taiwan.
Together with its subsidiary LAC, a wellness
brand that combines Eastern herbal ingre-
dients and modern technology, ONI Global
helps customers improve their overall physi-
cal, mental and emotional wellness.
Ron Sim, Chairman and V3’s most recent investment is its 69%
Chief Executive Oicer of V3 stake in Futuristic, a Singapore company TWG Tea
CONTENTS — APRIL 2018 VOLUME 14 NUMBER 3
S PAGE 30
12 | FACT & COMMENT // STEVE FORBES
“AS PEOPLE’S New Fed head: same old, bad old.
DISPOSABLE 30 UNDER 30
INCOME GROWS
26 | ONWARD AND UPWARD
IN CHINA, THEY Our third annual list showcases young leaders who are creating a stir in the Asia-Pac region.
ARE SPENDING EDITED BY RANA WEHBE
COMPANIES, PEOPLE
14 | EVER SKYWARD
Hong Kong’s apartment math should work for moguls who bought HNA’s sites at Kai Tak.
BY ROBERT OLSEN
18 | BREAKING OUT
Apichart Chutrakul is pushing Thai property company Sansiri in unexpected directions.
BY RON GLUCKMAN
JAPAN’S 50 RICHEST
70 | RACE TO THE PINNACLE
A familiar name sits on the top of the list, but others are gaining on him.
BY KERRY A. DOLAN
FORBES LIFE
78 | BUILDINGS FOR EVERYONE
India’s Balkrishna Doshi wins a coveted architectural prize.
BY KARL SHMAVONIAN
80 | THOUGHTS
On change.
SIDELINES
Editor Tim W. Ferguson
Editorial Director Karl Shmavonian
Art Director Charles Brucaliere
Senior Editor John Koppisch
Changing of the Guard
Wealth Lists Editors Luisa Kroll, Kerry A. Dolan
Photo Editor Michele Hadlow
W
hen Li Ka-shing
Statistics Editor Andrea Murphy
Research Director Sue Radlauer
pulled back last
Online Editor Jasmine Smith month from active
Reporter Grace Chung management of his corporate
Interns Prisca Ang, Anis Shakirah Mohd Muslimin empire, it was a symbolic mo-
Editorial Bureaus ment felt all over Asia. Near 90,
Beijing Yue Wang he is probably the most identii-
Shanghai Russell Flannery (Senior Ed.); Maggie Chen able face of the generation that
India Editor Naazneen Karmali put regional business on the
Contributing Editors global map ater the war years of
Bangkok Suzanne Nam the mid-20th century. Superman bids farewell to the daily grind.
Chennai Anuradha Raghunathan
hat cohort has begun passing
Hong Kong Shu-Ching Jean Chen
Jakarta Justin Doebele
from the scene, but only ater a very long run. Indeed, of the top 10 names on each of
Melbourne Lucinda Schmidt our 12 Asia-Paciic wealth lists, 28 are 80 or above. (Others of them have also retired
Perth Tim Treadgold from day-to-day operations.) he average of these 120 listings is a ripe old 68.
Singapore Jane A. Peterson Time is catching up with them, as it does with us all. hat’s one reason that some
Taipei Joyce Huang years ago we began a feature called he Next Tycoons, to introduce the ofspring who are
Vietnam Lan Anh Nguyen likely to step into what are usually founders’ shoes. (Sometimes those are grandfathers’
Columnist Ben Sin shoes.) We continue the series on page 50 with Allen Law of the Park Hotel Group.
Production Manager Michelle Ciulla “Superman” Li’s charted succession, to his elder son, Victor, is ordered and tradi-
tional. (I could have predicted as much from spending time with the man for a 2007
cover article.) Not always do family sagas turn out so predictably, and of course that
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF can hold storytelling drama for us. Increasingly, the spotlight is moving to daughters,
Steve Forbes one of the great Asian transitions of our era.
FORBES MAGAZINE
Each midyear, Forbes Asia assembles a big group of actual or prospective succes-
CHIEF CONTENT OFFICER Randall Lane sors to discuss their ambitions and apprehensions. hese private Next Tycoon forums
EXECUTIVE EDITOR Michael Noer are of the record, but they help inform me at least of the state of play in Asia’s notable
ART & DESIGN DIRECTOR Robert Mansfield family enterprises, which I hope then makes for richer magazine material.
FORBES DIGITAL
Ultimately, it’s the tycoons themselves, of any age, who make for interesting Forbes
VP, INVESTING EDITOR Matt Schifrin
copy. he “head knocker’s” life is oten mirrored in the business results. Li Ka-shing’s
VP, DIGITAL EDITOR Mark Coatney remarkable rise will be a tough act to follow, and I don’t just mean for Victor.
VP, PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT Salah Zalatimo
VP, WOMEN’S DIGITAL NETWORK Christina Vuleta
ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITORS
Frederick E. Allen LEADERSHIP
Loren Feldman ENTREPRENEURS
Janet Novack WASHINGTON
Michael K. Ozanian SPORTSMONEY
DEPARTMENT HEADS
Mark Decker, John Dobosz, Clay Thurmond
Jessica Bohrer VP, EDITORIAL COUNSEL
FOUNDED IN 1917
B.C. Forbes, Editor-in-Chief (1917-54)
REUTERS/BOBBY YIP
READERS SAY
CEO/ASIA, FORBES MEDIA
PRESIDENT & PUBLISHER, FORBES ASIA
CONVERSATION
William Adamopoulos THE KING HAS been dethroned.
SENIOR VICE PRESIDENTS Tina Wee, Serene Lee
Unstoppable delivery dauphin Jef
EXECUTIVE DIRECTORS Eugene Wong, Aarin Chan,
Janelle Kuah, James Sundram Bezos usurped reigning monarch
DIRECTOR, CIRCULATION Eunice Soo Bill Gates to claim the top spot
DEPUTY DIRECTOR, EVENTS & COMMUNICATIONS on our annual tally of the world’s
Audra Ruyters
billionaires (March). With an eye-
DEPUTY DIRECTOR, CONFERENCES Jolynn Chua
DEPUTY DIRECTOR, CIRCULATION Pavan Kumar watering net worth of $112 billion,
DEPUTY DIRECTOR, MARKETING & RESEARCH Joan Low Amazon’s founder also became the
SENIOR MANAGER, CONFERENCES Quek Xue Wei first nominal centibillionaire we’ve
SENIOR MANAGER, EVENTS & COMMUNICATIONS Melissa Ng
tracked over three decades. (Some
SENIOR MANAGER, MARKETING & RESEARCH Chow Sin Yee
readers retain their fealty to the an-
SENIOR MANAGER, AD SERVICES-DIGITAL Keiko Wong
OFFICE MANAGER/ASSISTANT TO THE CEO/ASIA cien régime: “Bill Gates forever #1,”
Jennifer Chung cheered Raquel Dunn on Linked-
AD SERVICES MANAGER Fiona Carvalho In.) One prominent tapioca-haired
CONFERENCE MANAGERS Clarabelle Chaw,
gadfly didn’t fare as well, shedding
Cherie Wong, Isabel Wong
ASSISTANT MANAGER, MARKETING & RESEARCH $400 million of his former $3.5 bil-
Gwynneth Chan lion fortune: “Entering politics has
ADVERTISING EXECUTIVES had an ill efect on President Trump’s purse,” wrote the New York Daily
Angelia Ang, Sharon Joseph, Sabrina Cheung
News’ Denis Slattery. Our profile of Malaysian billionaire Chen Lip Keong
CIRCULATION SERVICES
Taynmoli Karuppiah Sannassy, Jennifer Yim and his casino in Cambodia (“The Accidental Casino Mogul,” p. 34) inspired
this retort on Facebook from Jo Priestley: “Yes, let’s congratulate him for
helping to keep Cambodians poor. Gambling is a horrendously addictive
FORBES MEDIA
habit that the Khmers really don’t need shoved down their throats!”
CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER Michael Federle
CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER Michael York
CHIEF REVENUE OFFICER Mark Howard THE INTEREST GRAPH
EDITOR-AT-LARGE/GLOBAL FUTURIST Rich Karlgaard Our gambling story from the March issue hit the jackpot online:
GENERAL COUNSEL MariaRosa Cartolano
How Malaysian “Accidental” Casino Billionaire Chen Lip Keong’s Cambodia Bet Paid Of 17,538 page views
PRESIDENT, FORBESWOMAN Moira Forbes
April, 2018
+(1)!ƫāąƫđƫ1)!.ƫă
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that all Shangri-La
projects have gone
smoothly.”
10 | FORBES ASIA APRIL 2017
FACT & COMMENT
“With all thy getting, get understanding”
So obscure is the popular perception of William McKinley, seemingly somnolent way of doing things.
the 25th president of the U.S., who was assassinated early Don’t judge a book by its cover, we were once taught,
in his second term in 1901, that there was hardly a peep and in no case has this been more true than in McKin-
of protest (other than some ritual denunciations from his ley’s. His presidential record is impressive, yet the way
home state of Ohio) when in 2015 Barack Obama changed McKinley did things—methodically, cautiously and with
the name of America’s highest mountain from Mount behind-the-scenes consensus-building—made it easy for
McKinley to Denali. It didn’t help that this cautious, frock- denigrators to portray him as following events instead of
coated and self-efacing politician was succeeded by the al- shaping them. His leadership, Robert W. Merry points out
ways dramatic and dazzlingly colorful heodore Roosevelt, in this excellent, highly readable biography, was “more of
whose volcanic energy sharply contrasted with McKinley’s the hidden-hand variety.” As McKinley’s secretary of war,
BILLIONAIRE BETS
EVER
SKYWARD
Hong Kong’s apartment math
should work for property moguls
who bought HNA’s sites at Kai Tak.
BY ROBERT OLSEN
T
wo of Hong Kong’s billionaire property moguls
have set new records with the loty prices they’ve
paid for land at the city’s former Kai Tak airport.
But in the world’s least afordable housing mar-
ket, who’s to say they won’t come in for a smooth
landing?
Lee Shau Kee’s Henderson Land Development bought two
plots from the cash-strapped Chinese conglomerate HNA
Group for an eye-catching $2 billion in February. With a total
gross loor area, on buildout, of around 1 million square feet,
the transaction equates to $1,931 per square foot.
By the time of its completion in two to three years and tak-
ing into account that Henderson will be pitching a high-end
product, the units may sell on average for $4,076 per square
foot, according to a spokesman from the developer. hat’s be-
cause the majority of the apartments will have unobstruct- commercial space with numerous parks and venues for cul-
ed views of Victoria Harbour, an added attraction for buyers tural and artistic performances along with an already opera-
already willing to pay a premium to live in what the govern- tional cruise-ship terminal.
ment plans as another Central Business District—its “CBD 2” Henderson said that based on a total development cost of
initiative. When completed, overall CBD 2 development (in- just over $2,930 per square foot, it targets a proit margin ap-
cluding the Kai Tak site) will span 58 million square feet of proaching 30% on its project, consistent with its average de-
velopment margin over the past four years. says it intends to expand an existing residential project called
LARRY CHAN/REUTERS
Wheelock & Co., controlled by billionaire Peter Woo, Oasis Kai Tak, which has been priced on average at $2,887 per
bought another parcel from HNA in early March for $810 square foot ater discount, according to reports. (he com-
million with a buildable gross loor area of 425,000 square pany points to a higher recent sale.) he cost of that site was
feet, which translates to $1,904 per square foot. he company a modest $777 a square foot in 2014. Wheelock declined to
BILLIONAIRE BETS
“HNA grew too fast. It’s grown fast- to Cusson Leung, JPMorgan’s head of crisis,” he says.
er than their knowledge,” said Warut property research. So there ought to be enough lit for
Promboon, managing partner at Hong Kong’s average home pric- a irst-class takeof—of lats, this time—
Bondcritic, an Asian credit research es jumped 14.8% last year, ensuring that at Kai Tak. F
SANSIRI
Breaking Out
After 34 years, Apichart Chutrakul is pushing conservative Thai property company
Sansiri in unexpected directions. BY RON GLUCKMAN
18 | FORBES ASIA APRIL 2018
T he pounding music stopped abruptly, and half a dozen young
executives bounded onstage at Bangkok’s Jam Factory, bathed in colored spotlights.
hese weren’t corporate suits. Instead, they were an eclectic bunch: apostles for indoor
farming and co-working spaces, entrepreneurs who ran hip hotels, and the founder
and chief of trendsetting magazine Monocle, Tyler Brûlé. A staid hailand property
developer, Sansiri, had suddenly invested $80 million in their companies in a move to
diversify its business, and this was their coming-out party last November.
Many onlookers seemed bemused; this was a quantum shit for a company that
had never made an outside investment or strayed from its bedrock of residential real
estate. So its new strategy was guaranteed to generate considerable buzz. “Disruption
is everywhere these days,” Chief Executive Apichart Chutrakul told Forbes Asia ater-
ward. “You have to change with the times.”
Still, it would be hard to ind another company in hailand that has so faithfully
followed the corporate dictum “Focus on what you do best.” Nobody knows this better
than Chutrakul, 57, who helped launch his family’s real estate company in 1984 and
has been at the helm through thick and thin—the 1994 merger with the property
division of the Lamsam family (which started Kasikornbank) and Sansiri’s stock list-
ing in 1996, followed by the devastating Asian inancial crisis of 1997. Even ater a
painful reorganization, Sansiri never wavered from its devotion to residential property
development.
hat commitment has kept Sansiri in the top tier of hailand’s big residential develop-
ers. Last year it launched 14 projects, valued at $1.1 billion, a 24% increase over 2016. It
looks to be even busier this year, with 31 projects in the pipeline, worth $2 billion. Accord-
ing to analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg, net proit is expected to top $102 million
this year, a 22.8% jump over 2017, on expected revenue of $979 million that would be 7.4%
higher than last year. Chutrakul owns at least a $13 million stake.
Sansiri’s success comes at a time when the industry is surging ahead despite ample
red lags. hailand’s economy has been battered in recent years by natural disasters
and political instability. A military government has ruled since a May 2014 coup, and
uncertainty intensiied ater the death of long-reigning King Bhumibol Adulyadej in
December 2016. Yet, as other sectors contracted, real estate has deied warnings from
analysts and continued to expand. Bangkok is awash in construction, with condomin-
iums, luxury malls and office towers rising everywhere. Many projects boast not only
record-breaking price tags, but sizeable foreign investment.
One of the biggest Bangkok projects nearing completion is Icon Siam, a $1.7 bil-
Connect the bots: “Disruption is everywhere lion riverside development that ranks among the biggest in hai history. It’s spear-
these days. You have to change with the headed by another CEO named Chutrakul—his wife, Chadatip Chutrakul, head of
LUKE DUGGLEBY FOR FORBES
times,” says CEO Apichart Chutrakul. shopping-mall giant Siam Piwat. hey met three decades ago, ater he returned from
studying in the U.S., and have one daughter. “We don’t really talk about our work,” he
insists. He prefers leaving business at the office, relaxing by watching a game of soccer;
he’s a longtime fan and player.
hey also don’t collaborate on projects. “Our businesses are diferent. Her busi-
SANSIRI
ness is really shopping,” he says. Siam’s Chadatip is indeed best co-working space in hailand in May, while Farmshelf will be
known for her company’s high-end malls in the Siam district. tapped for Sansiri’s high-end projects later this year. Sansiri
But her Icon project will ofer apartments at he Residences at President Srettha havisin says the investments weren’t as sud-
Mandarin Oriental’s 52-story tower and the 70-loor Magnolia den as they seemed but followed about a year of planning and
Waterfront Residences, and boasts big-name partners. Magnolia review: “he it had to be right.”
Quality Development is chaired by hippaporn Ahriyavraromp, Chutrakul is looking beyond hailand for customers, and
daughter of Charoen Pokphand Group Senior Chairman for good reason. Although political and economic worries have
Dhanin Chearavanont. Magnolia and CP each have a 25% stake scared away some foreign buyers, investment continues to low
in the project, while Siam Piwat has 50%. from Asia and the Gulf. Sansiri estimates that 25% of its sales
Sansiri’s developments are not as grandiose, although its 98 go to foreign buyers, and 70% of those are from China. hat’s
Wireless is the most luxurious condominium project mounted partly because Sansiri has followed the money, opening offices
by the company. Located near Lumpini Park and some of the in Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Shenzhen. Hong Kong
major embassies, the 25-story building with only 77 spacious accounts for about half its China sales; Sansiri opened an office
units has commanded some of the highest prices paid for there in January. Another is planned for Dubai to serve the
residential property in Bangkok. In general, its projects appear growing Gulf market.
to be less risky than the megaprojects, involving only a fraction Part of it is simple logic. “Real estate tends to follow GDP,”
of the capital, so it’s on the hook for less if conditions change. notes Chutrakul. “If the GDP grows, then business is good.”
he company also has a mix of diferent types of projects, so its Lately, hailand’s economy has rebounded, growing by around
3% a year, so Sansiri has been growing
by around 5%, “maybe a little more,” he
says. But in uncertain times, it doesn’t
“WE INVESTED A SMALL AMOUNT TO make sense to be dependent on the same
buyers, he says.
GET A WINDOW TO THE WORLD.” Chutrakul learned some of the hard-
EXPANSION AND ADDING NEW est lessons two decades ago, when the
inancial crisis swept the region, wiping
TECHNOLOGY ARE CRITICAL. “TODAY out vast tracts of wealth. Many compa-
IT’S ABOUT SURVIVAL. IT’S NOT JUST nies went under, especially the ones that
had extended too much credit, such as in
PROFITS, IT’S SURVIVAL.” banking and real estate. Sansiri sold of
its inventory, survived and was among
the irst hai companies to successfully
portfolio isn’t dominated by a single, giant project aiming to sell clear their debt and restart.
units at sky-high prices. Foreign investors looded the region, buying up distressed
Much of the growth for midrange property in Bangkok has assets. By a fortuitous turn of events, Sansiri received an invest-
migrated along the expanding mass-transit lines and away from ment from Starwood Capital Group, which later assembled
the soaring land prices of the central districts. Sansiri part- one of the world’s biggest hotel portfolios. hey sent a young
ners with BTS Group—which built and operates the overhead employee to work with Sansiri: Amar Lalvani. Fast-forward
Skytrain—to erect condominiums along the new lines. A ive- two decades, and he’s among the executives onstage at the gala
year plan budgeted $32 billion for 25 projects. So far, a dozen announcing the Sansiri investments. He’s now CEO of Standard
projects have been launched and have sold briskly. “It’s really International. “I lived in hailand nearly two years, so really got
a no-brainer,” says Chutrakul. “We capture the middle market, to know Sansiri,” he says, enthusiastic about collaborating again.
using BTS as an anchor. he results have been phenomenal. Chutrakul believes that the Standard brand could be ex-
Partnerships these days are important.” He adds that increasing ported to premier cities in Asia, perhaps with residential units
challenges demand lexibility and new strategies. alongside. “here are lots of possibilities,” he notes. He also
his was the catalyst for the decision to invest in six com- wants to leverage the Monocle brand. Sansiri is far along with
panies in November. he lion’s share was $56 million paid for a planning for the irst Monocle residential building in hailand,
35% stake in Standard International, a small hotel group with complete with a Monocle cofee shop and trendy Monocle
famed properties in New York, Los Angeles and Miami. he ittings. hat should open within a year, and Chutrakul says it
other investments: $12 million in JustCo, a Singapore-based could work in other cities in Asia and beyond. “hese invest-
co-working group; $6.6 million in Hostmaker, a London-based ments are just the start,” he says. “We invested a small amount
management company for Airbnb hosts; $6 million in Monocle; to get a window to the world.” Expansion and adding new tech-
and $300,000 in Farmshelf, which makes indoor-farming shelf nology are critical, even to established industries such as real
systems for urban dwellers who want a bit of greenery and to estate, he says. “Today it’s about survival. It’s not just proits, it’s
grow their own vegetables for salads. JustCo will launch its irst survival.” F
PAYTM
India’s Virtual
Mall-Cum-Bank
Vijay Shekhar Sharma’s Paytm uniies small
shops and runs circles around stodgy lenders.
BY HARICHANDAN ARAKALI
S
amsung Electronics sells its phones through about million-plus in sales in the 30 to 40 days through Diwali the
150,000 authorized shops in India. And Paytm Mall, month before.
through a collaboration with Samsung that started In 2017, One97 Communications restructured itself.
in November 2017, is bringing all of them onto its he mobile wallet service became part of the newly formed
online marketplace, giving each one a QR code (ma- Paytm Payments Bank, which in turn will lead the company’s
trix bar code), and the requisite training and support. inancial services foray for consumers. And the e-commerce
Paytm Mall is the recently formed e-commerce business part of selling various products and services—from train
of One97 Communications, which was separated from its and movie tickets to smartphones, air puriiers and washing
parent to function independently a year ago. One97 Commu- machines—became part of Paytm E-commerce, a separate
nications, based in Noida, operates the Paytm mobile wallet. company that runs the Paytm Mall online marketplace and
And with backing from China’s Alibaba Group and Japan’s mobile app.
SotBank, billionaire founder Vijay Shekhar Sharma, 39, has “We are raising a large amount of money on the e-com-
been expanding into online commerce, inancial services (in- merce side as we speak,” says Sharma. hat will make the
cluding wealth management and insurance), as well as travel e-commerce business alone “doubly unicorn,” he adds, and
and entertainment. the entire company could be valued as high as $12 billion.
While Samsung is also popular on websites such as hat would top Flipkart’s value of $11.6 billion at the time of
Amazon and Flipkart, its massive oline distribution is its the Bengaluru rival’s $1.4 billion fundraising in April 2017,
strength. However, as online smartphone sales rose in India, possibly making Paytm India’s most-valued startup. Paytm
it was a challenge for the brick-and-mortar stores to match Mall’s funding deal is expected to conclude soon, he says, but
e-commerce ofers. Getting onto Paytm Mall’s platform— doesn’t add details.
whether at an actual retail store or on the online app or he funding, led by SotBank, is to the tune of $460 mil-
website, or even on Samsung’s own online storefront—means lion, a person with knowledge of the transaction tells Forbes
that “the ofer is the same,” says Amit Sinha, a vice president India, and Paytm Mall will likely raise more money as well.
at Paytm and COO of its e-commerce business. India’s retail scene comprises some 15 million shops, with an
“he O2O strategy has been working wonders for us,” says overwhelming majority of those being run by individual owners.
Sinha. O2O refers to “oline-to-online” because Paytm is hey lack scale and have limited inventories, Sinha points out.
attempting to connect to the internet via its QR codes every Paytm plans to ofer them a way of eliminating these two ob-
oline store it can reach. And not just with Samsung. Red stacles, so that those mom-and-pop stores could do a lot more.
Tape, Khadim’s shoes—the latter particularly famous in Kol- Paytm is digitizing them and training them to take orders
kata—and Lenovo laptops are among the many brands that from consumers online and at the store. his means the
are beginning to tap Paytm Mall to boost their sales. consumer gets “the same level of service,” Sinha says, that one
Sinha says the e-commerce business, which saw the formal is used to at large retailers or on e-commerce sites. It includes
launch of the marketplace in April 2017, doubled its market matching the discounts and ofers.
share to about 14% by November, helped in part by the $350 herefore, there will be millions of points of sale and ful-
PAYTM
illment versus a few large warehouses that the big e-com- lytics facilitate what comes next—quick on-the-spot loans.
merce sites have. “hat is the core belief that we are building Of the 150,000 stores, only a few thousand have ever been
on, and early results have been really good,” Sinha says. able to ofer a loan to a consumer to purchase a fancy smart-
Paytm has over 300 million users, and the company phone. his was because the traditional approach of banks
processes over 10 million transactions a day, says COO Kiran required a stafer to be physically present at the store and
Vasireddy. It has 6 million merchants on its network. “he ofer loans to the buyer, Sinha says.
key is to reach out to every kind of small and large store to hit With Paytm Mall’s network, each store can ofer the same
10 million stores by the end of March 2019,” he says. plan from the same seller “and the campaign goes live at the
Loans, not just to consumers but also to sellers, form an click of a button,” he says. “It’s a deep and symbiotic relation-
intrinsic part of the O2O business as well. Take the case of ship that we’re getting into with Samsung.”
Samsung phones, for instance. When each of the 150,000 stores he importance of the lending efort is underscored by the
SUMIT DAYAL
becomes an “endless aisle” for the consumer and the seller, fact that One97’s CFO himself is charged with running the
Samsung gets to know what is selling where, and deeper ana- lending business as well.
ness using Paytm, why should they not get attractive loans? population are poor and digitally illiterate. “here is a huge
A 10,000-rupee loan (about $150) for a consumer or a diference between India and China. China is so far ahead in
200,000-rupee loan (about $3,075) to a seller would not run terms of digitization and prosperity,” he says. F
smoothly if done in the traditional way. A Paytm user, however, With Sayan Chakraborty. Adapted from Forbes India, a
already has a history of transactions on the platform, and the licensee of Forbes Media.
Jackie Chan was born in Hong Kong in 1954. At age seven he entered the China Drama Academy, a Peking opera school run by Master Yu Jim-Yuen.
For the next 10 years he studied classical opera, acrobatics, martial arts, acting and singing, cultivating the necessary talents to be the superstar
he would one day become. After graduation he distinguished himself as a skilled stuntman. By the time he reached his 20s he was a well-known
action star with a broad cinematic range that included directing, lighting and props.
Haruhisa Handa wears many hats. Not only knew it, the Hong Kong actor had agreed to has built over 130 schools. It made me won-
is he president of HANDA Watch World, a become the company’s ambassador. He then der what kind of person he was. Somehow
chain of boutiques that specialize in luxury flew to Tokyo for the sole reason of meeting it doesn’t feel like we just met. It helps that
watches, he is also a philanthropist and edu- face-to-face with Handa at a HANDA Watch Mr. Handa is so personable. I’m excited about
cator. When Jackie Chan first heard from a World event where the two quickly realized working together on future projects.”
friend that Handa is “fluent in eight languages their common interests.
and well versed in Chinese opera and a dedi- “Over several decades I’ve built about Worldwide Success
cated philanthropist,” it piqued his interest. 30 schools for underprivileged children in In the early 1980s Chan’s popularity soared
One thing led to another and before he China,” says Chan. “In comparison, Mr. Handa in Japan and throughout Asia, and by the
PROMOTION
Celebrating Memories
In Chan’s busy life, how important is a watch?
“For me a watch is not just for telling time. It’s
for fashion and also for capturing memories,”
Chan says. “One of my dreams as a child was
to own a nice watch. My father, my godpar-
ents and others gave me watches as presents,
and I’ve bought watches to reward myself for
achievements. So each watch has its own
story. And since watches are small they don’t Chan and Handa speaking on stage at a HANDA Watch World event last December. HANDA Watch World
take up much space, I can line them up and opened a new shop in February, its first store in Nagoya, The Banana Watch Shop. (Nishiki 3-5-14, Naka Ward,
reminisce about each story.” Nagoya City, Aichi Prefecture TEL: 81-52-961-8163). In the Tokyo area, HANDA Watch World’s headquarters in
Nishi Ogikubo is called Tokei no Koibito Kissu wa Te ni Shite (“Wristwatch Lovers Kiss on the Hand”) and its
Three Dreams store in Kichijoji is named The Uchu (“Space”) Watch Store.
Chan says he has had three dreams. The first
one was realized in 2002 when he was given
his own star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. A powerhouse in the film industry, Chan most successful film stars, he shared his
The second is ensuring children around the has created numerous monumental works, secret to success:
world get an education and third is making by-products of his relentless determination “Whatever you do, let your conscience
world peace a reality. and knack for getting things done. He dem- guide you in following your convictions,” he
His first dream began when he launched onstrates the same determination in pursu- says. “Help as many people as you can. To me,
his acting career at age seven. His formal train- ing his two other dreams. making a good movie is most important. If I
ing in Peking Opera and martial arts paved the In 1988, Chan established the Jackie Chan were preoccupied with making money, being
way for success as an action star in his 20s. He Charitable Foundation, donating mats and famous or winning awards, then awards and
later found fame in Hollywood with hit movies other supplies to a martial arts school in money would never come. I think business is
such as “Project A” (1983), “Police Story” (1985), Moscow and another school in South Africa. the same. Focus on one thing and do it for
“Rumble in the Bronx” (1995) and “Rush Hour” The foundation also holds lectures at U.S. and the people. If you try to cheat others just so
(1998), receiving numerous awards for his act- Cambodian universities. More recently Chan you can make quick money, you’ll end up
ing, directing and stunt work. His accomplish- has been building schools in remote areas of with nothing.”
ments were further recognized when he was China through his Dragon’s Heart Founda- Chan says his meeting with Handa was
awarded an honorary Oscar in 2016. tion. He is a goodwill ambassador for UNICEF meant to be.
and UNAIDS, and is a member of the Ameri- “Mr. Handa has been successful in many
Lifetime of Giving can Red Cross National Celebrity Cabinet. He industries and has helped many people
To realize his second and third dreams, Chan also established the Jackie Chan Civil Aviation through his philanthropy,” Chan says. “It is
has been practicing philanthropy for more Foundation in China, performs at charity con- because of this that we met. I feel like I’ve
than 30 years. In a 2007 interview with the certs and speaks at events. In 2011, he orga- made a new friend, which means I’m con-
National Association of Professional Martial nized a fundraiser to help victims of Japan’s tinuing to expand my circle of contacts, and I
Artists magazine, he told a story that speaks earthquake and tsunami victims. think that’s wonderful.”
volumes about his character: Chan’s business interests are diverse as In hindsight it seems like this friendship
“I once visited a children’s hospital bear- well. In addition to owning a stuntman train- was inevitable. Together these kindred spir-
ing gifts. When a patient asked me what ing school, he is co-owner of Nobu restaurant its will surely be a powerful force in helping
was inside the wrapped present, I couldn’t in Beijing, and even has a chain of movie the- Chan’s dreams come true.
answer, as I had delegated all the shopping aters named after him.
to my staff. It was embarrassing that I didn’t Contact information:
know. Overcome with guilt, I made sure to Follow Your Convictions Misuzu Corporation
personally shop for the children’s gifts before Chan routinely makes Forbes’ list of the 81-3-3247-5585
I visited again the following Christmas.” world’s highest paid actors. As one of Asia’s www.misuzu.com
FORBES ASIA
30 UNDER 30
ASIA’S CLASS OF 2018
In its third year, our annual 30 Under 30 Asia list
features young innovators in ten categories who
are reinventing their industries. Representing
24 countries across Asia-Paciic—including
Azerbaijan and North Korea for the irst time—these
inalists were selected from thousands of online
nominations, researched by our team of reporters
and vetted by a panel of A-list judges.
THE BIRTHDAY CUTOFF TO MAKE THE LIST WAS DECEMBER 31, 1987.
M U SICI A N I NDO NE S I A
30 UNDER 30
Amira Geneid, 25
FOUNDER & CEO, ZAHARA MALAYSIA
For a long time, Amira Geneid had been looking for a high-quality cosmetics brand that was also halal-compliant. She found
none and so three years ago decided to start one herself. After 18 months of research and development, Zahara was born.
Self-funded and with its products manufactured in Europe, Zahara boasts a line of cosmetics that is not just free of alcohol
and animal products, but also certified halal, meaning its production process and suppliers have been approved under Islamic
law. Some of its products, like the signature water-permeable oxygen nail polish, also aim for convenience, allowing Muslim
MUNSHI AHMED FOR FORBES
women to perform wudhu (the water cleansing act before prayer) properly without having to remove it.
With Muslims making up a quarter of the world’s population, products targeted for them “shouldn’t be a niche anymore,”
says Geneid. Zahara’s products are sold online in Singapore and Malaysia; its next step is to ofer worldwide shipping by the
end of the year—starting with Indonesia and Dubai, where it is partnering with local courier services. Geneid’s aim is for Zahara
to become an aspirational halal brand that can be used by Muslim women around the globe: “I want to show how beautiful
Muslim women can be—how beauty can be modest and be centered around faith, but it still can be inspiring.” —Rana Wehbe
JUDGES: Liu explains that he applies machine learning in their feeds: “When you have a lot of data, how you visualize it and how you
Kai-fu Lee, CEO, Sinovation Ventures communicate this information to clients is even more important than having the information.” The challenge is too much aggregated
Madhur Deora, CFO and SVP, Paytm knowledge. “So much is left undigested,” Liu adds.
Liu Genping, Partner, Vertex Ventures Banks have quants churning out algorithms, but Tu and Liu’s computers can do the same—faster and better. “We hate to say it,
but we’re taking away jobs from analysts.” MioTech has more than 20 clients in Hong Kong, Singapore and China. The fintech startup
has raised $8 million, led by ZhenFund and Li Ka-shing’s private investment arm Horizons Ventures. —Pamela Ambler
30 UNDER 30
Su Chunzi, 28
EXECUT I VE VI CE PR ESI DEN T & PA R T N ER ,
F LOW ER PLUS CHI N A
In 2015, Su, working as a Shanghai-based venture capitalist, met
executives from Flowerplus to discuss a potential investment in
the subscription-bouquet startup. Su liked the business model:
Customers pick from four plans (1, 3, 6 or 12 months; prices
range from roughly $20 to $700) and receive arrangements
weekly. Su was won over, so much so that she quit her VC job
and became a partner at the startup, which has since expanded
to 5 million users and over $100 million in sales.
The success of this subscription-based model has given Su
the idea for her next venture, Rouralism. The service, soon to
be launched, will deliver daily-use products such as underwear
and toilet paper. Su expects Rouralism to find a market among
STEFAN CHOW FOR FORBES
JUDGES
Romi Haan, CEO and President,
Haan Corp.
Paul Fang, CTO, Midea
Angie Lau, CEO, Clover Group
While volunteering at a children’s hospital, Esther Wang noticed the fear and
anxiety kids experience ahead of procedures involving needles. Using her design
background, the 29-year-old Singaporean went on to develop an educational toy
character called Rabbit Ray, whose function is to inform and reassure children
about things like injections, vaccinations and intravenous drips.
It may have taken four years in product development, but Wang’s eforts paid
of with Rabbit Ray now being used by leading hospitals in five countries and
available online for purchase by individuals. Rabbit Ray can also be utilized as a
tool to start diicult conversations about terminal illness and death. “These are
important conversations, but often we do not how to enter them,” says Wang,
who believes that by using the language of play, caretakers can create a friendly
and healthy way to talk about such topics. Wang, however, is not stopping
here. Her aim is to take part in making an impact in the health care sector. “I’m
constantly asking myself, ‘What is the next area in which you can touch a billion
lives and make health care more eicient?’” —R.W.
Supporting Organizations
Supporting Sponsors
30 UNDER 30
Quek, in Singapore, made our irst Asia list in 2016, thanks to Carousell, an eBay-like Eric Gnock Fah
online marketplace for buying and selling new and secondhand goods in Southeast CO FOUNDER AND PRESIDENT
K LOOK T RAVEL
Asia that he cofounded with Lucas Ngoo and Marcus Tan. Speaking to Forbes re-
cently, he says that they had “laid the foundations” at Carousell and are now focusing A travel enthusiast, Gnock Fah of Hong
on innovation. Kong started Klook in 2014 as a Web
“In the startup phase of our business, we were laser-focused on growth and our and mobile platform to book attractions,
mission to inspire the world to start selling,” he says. “We’ve been fortunate to have tours, activities and other travel services
investors that see the value we’re creating and have been willing to invest in grow- in Asia at exclusive rates. Ramping up
ing this business with us.” And this backing—$40 million in a 2016 funding round quickly, Klook has expanded to include
and more than $70 million in another last year—has given them conidence to keep more than 150 global destinations. Last
pushing boundaries. Quek says Carousell may soon start ofering a greater variety of year it raised $90 million from investors
categories, including property and cars. including Sequoia Capital and Goldman
In the last quarter of 2017, Carousell reported 110 million listings—with 140 Sachs. “Our app and website now has
listings posted per minute—and 43 million items sold. It said users were spending as over 12 million visitors per month from
much as 18 minutes on its app. Quek points to Carousell’s investment in artiicial- over 50 countries and regions looking
intelligence-powered listings. “We see AI as the new frontier for the classiieds sector, for travel activities,” says Gnock Fah,
or classiieds 4.0, with its predictive and automated capabilities improving the overall who was featured on last year’s list.
buying and selling experience.” Like Carousell’s Quek, Gnock Fah
But he admits they’ve barely scratched the surface when it comes to convincing says getting their backers to understand
people across Southeast Asia to buy and sell online: “We’ve built some amazing com- Klook’s vision has been pivotal to con-
munities all across the region, a validation of the problem we’ve started to solve, but tinued success. “We’re thankful that our
now is when the real work starts.” investors are giving us the freedom to
Also 2017 honorees, New Zealand-based Beaton and Kushor Ater securing $30 million from a series B funding round in
were recognized for their work with Crimson Education, an 2016, Crimson—which started life as a Facebook page—is now
online platform that helps students everywhere connect with valued at more than $200 million, according to media reports,
services including tuition for extracurricular tutoring and uni- backed by investors in the U.S. and China. “Our systems enable
versity admissions advice. us to capture relevant data on the student experience as well as
Describing business the past year as “phenomenal,” the pair their individual progress, and allows us to make data-informed
tells Forbes: “Each year our student results raise the bar, and decisions over the course of their program to ensure they
this year has been no exception. he Ivy League reported that achieve the best outcomes—and have a blast doing so,” says
its recent early admissions round was the most competitive Beaton.
ever. Despite this, 50% of our students who applied for early Would they have done anything diferently, in hindsight?
admission to Harvard gained acceptance, despite the reported “As we have grown, the impact that our technology has had
14.5% admissions rate for early applicants. Crimson also sup- on the quality of our service delivery and the student journey
ported 11 successful applications to Oxford and Cambridge, has skyrocketed, and I see this continuing on into the distant
despite Oxford receiving nearly 6 applications for each available future,” says Beaton. “If only we had started just a little earlier,
place.” who knows where we’d be right now.” —Paul Armstrong
THE 10 Q
Digitize—or Die
The pace of technological advancement has never been faster,
three-year valley of death. If we don’t,
we’re going to get eaten alive.” If the CEO
goes to the board and it doesn’t support
him, then the CEO should think hard
says VMware chief Pat Gelsinger, and every CEO in America about resigning.
needs to seize the moment. Before VMware, you spent 30 years at Intel.
What did you learn from the Intel founders,
Is the progress of technology speeding or bucks and a credit card, and I’ll give you Bob Noyce, Gordon Moore, Andy Grove?
slowing? the world’s largest supercomputer for the Gordon is the humblest billionaire who ever
Both. Moore’s Law hasn’t stopped, but it’s next two minutes, a larger supercomputer existed. One time my wife and I were at Ma-
bending. We were on this doubling-every- than was ever assembled before. Entrepre- cy’s, and I look up and there’s Gordon’s wife,
two-years curve. Now it’s more like dou- neurs around the world can take advantage Betty, looking through the $1 bin [laughs].
bling every three years. of that. The other two, Noyce and Grove, fought a lot.
Why? What’s the meaning of your phrase “the four How’d they put that aside?
Because going from 14-nanometer chips to superpowers of technology”? If you were to watch Andy and Bob argue,
7 nanometers is hard. You’re getting close to he four superpowers are cloud, mobile, you’d say, “They’re going to kill each
physical limits. You need tons of capital to IoT and AI. Cloud is supercomputing other. They hate each other.” But Andy
manufacture them. power at unlimited scale. Mobile is unlim- loved the debate. Andy wanted somebody
But you also said that technology progress is ited reach. IoT is unlimited access. AI is un- with a point of view—and data to defend
speeding up. rivaled intelligence. It really is the cascading it—and the willingness to defend that
Now, in the cloud era, give me a thousand efect of those four things coming together
ERIC MILLETTE FOR FORBES
point of view.
PAT GELSINGER SPOKE WITH RICH KARLGAARD, OUR EDITOR-AT-LARGE AND GLOBAL FUTURIST.
THIS INTERVIEW HAS BEEN EDITED AND CONDENSED. FOR THE EXTENDED CONVERSATION, VISIT FORBES.COM/SITES/RICHKARLGAARD.
JAPAN
IN AT THE GROUND LEVEL: J TRUST’S
UNIQUE STRATEGY IN THE ASEAN REGION
By focusing on retail and small business customers, J Trust has found success in a niche
market segment often overlooked by the other big foreign banks in the ASEAN region
Japan’s aging population and shrink- major industrial and infrastructure we focus on micro-inancing so that Nobuyoshi Fujisawa,
ing domestic market has compelled projects. J Trust’s strategy involves people can buy agricultural equip- President and CEO, J Trust
Japanese companies to look abroad coming into a developing market at ment or supplies. Our actions are
for new opportunities. Like many a later stage than other players, tar- aimed at increasing people’s everyday porate loans from roughly $1 million
other Japanese inancial institutions, J geting the retail and small business living standards.” to $5 million,” says Mr. Fujisawa.
Trust is focusing its overseas efforts in customers that are not catered to by Through its subsidiaries in the re- “I expect to have an increase in the
the fast-growing ASEAN region. the other big foreign banks. gion, J Trust provides small loans av- number of banks and services across
But while other major banks in “We target the populations and eraging from just $200 to $300. For South East Asia, while pursuing the
the region focus on mega projects, we focus on personal consumer small business customers that need same business approach – micro-
providing credit lines ranging from credit products, which is something to buy expensive equipment, such inancing individual clients and mak-
$10 million to $1 billion, J Trust has that major banks don’t do. That is as agricultural machinery, it can offer ing people happy. Even though we
found itself a niche market in micro- why we do not look upon the major hire purchase and the loan amount is are different to the majority of other
inancing and small business loans, a banks moving into these locations as up to $30,000, but that is generally banks, the inance industry is well
strategy which, aside from generat- competitors, but rather as potential its top limit per client. established, which makes differentia-
ing healthy proits, is improving liveli- partners,” says Nobuyoshi Fujisawa, “Not having other banks address- tion hard to come by. This means that
hoods at ground level. President and CEO of J Trust. ing the consumer market means no in two years’ time, we cannot say that
In a developing country, irst- “As a private consumer-focused competition for us. Furthermore, J something will be signiicantly differ-
mover foreign banks generally come bank, our products will always be Trust Indonesia does not only focus ent. We must move forward step-by-
in to provide inancial support for about money. In places like Indonesia, on micro-inances, it also deals in cor- step and not lose focus.”
2 JAPAN SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION
The majority of FFEC’s proits still while adapting to the customer’s de- soon we would like to expand by hav-
comes from Japan. However, it is mands. In India, we adopt a B2B and ing production lines in those countries
increasing investments and gaining a B2C approach. For the automotive as well. We would like to set up sat-
more market share in ASEAN countries industry, in which we have been highly ellite operations in these countries,”
such as Thailand and Vietnam, where successful, we have been able to rely says Shinichi Iwamoto, President of
it has had a long-standing presence. on our excellent partners. Neuron Japan.
Mr. Momii also wants to help more “We are excellent suppliers, show- “With Neutex in Malaysia and Indo-
Japanese companies enter Myanmar casing good products, good quality nesia, right now we are dealing with
and Cambodia, through the establish- and an amazing supply chain. Further- the gaskets, valves and related parts. In
ment of business-driven partnerships more, we have the ability to customize these markets the competition is very
with local companies, which otherwise certain products to best it the needs high. One strategy is to directly com-
would be direct competitors. “This of our partners.” pete with the Chinese products. Of
represents a facilitating approach to- Engineering irm Neuron is also course, we are the winners if we are
wards the establishment of enduring Q“We are witnessing a shift competing directly with Chinese com- talking about high-quality products.
relationships,” he says. towards developing high- petitors for contracts across South East “However, that is not enough, we
Civil engineering irm Raito Ko- quality infrastructure and that Asia. The company has two subsidiar- want to include everything. For ex-
gyo, whose main business is in slope is leveraging the potential for ies in the region: Neutex Advance En- ample, with the expansion joints, the
protection and stabilization, ground gineering in Malaysia and Rainbow average product lifespan for Chinese
improvement and soil-cement walls,
Japanese companies to do well NEUTEX Engineering in Indonesia. products is two years, whereas a Japa-
is another Japanese irm looking to ex- overseas within the region” Neutex Advance Engineering manu- nese product is 20 years. Furthermore,
pand its footprint in Asia as investment factures piping components (such we highly value the craftsmanship of
Joichiro Momii,
in the region’s infrastructure increases as metal expansion joints), as well as each of our employees in our R&D; this
dramatically. It believes the technolo- Director and Senior Advisor, compressors and pumps for oil and is what separates us from our competi-
gies it has cultivated in Japan could Fuji Furukawa Engineering gas facilities. Its clients include Malay- tors in China.”
help to stabilize the infrastructure and Construction sia’s national oil company Petronas. Across the world, the ‘Made in
built in Asian countries that are often Neuron is one of the growing number Japan’ tag has signiied high quality,
subjected to natural disasters, such as structure spending bonanza over the of Japanese SMEs looking abroad for durability and craftsmanship. Now
earthquakes or flooding. coming years. new opportunities. Japan hopes to come out on top in
“We would like to contribute to “At Nippon Paint, we place qual- “It is very rare for Japanese SMEs to the competition with China for con-
infrastructure development in Asia by ity and technology as key factors to go out of the country. At the moment struction contracts across Asia, by lev-
using our expertise in geotechnical en- our success,” says President and CEO, in Malaysia and Indonesia we only eraging on the sterling reputation for
gineering that we have built up over Tetsushi Tado. “To ensure the quality have outlets for sales. Nevertheless, quality it has built over the decades.
the years,” says company president, of our products, we apply the require-
Mr. Kazuo Suzuki. ments of the automotive industry to
“Natural disasters, especially cli- all our market segments, contributing
mate-related disasters, are becoming to the creation of a trusted and reli-
more severe these days. Under these able brand.
conditions, we need to maintain vari- “China and the Asian countries
ous infrastructures such as roads, rail- are the most important regions for us
roads, airports and ports, and keep because 45 percent of the demand
them safe. We have continued to for paint and coatings comes from
develop technologies in this ield for the Asian region. We have four main
more than 70 years, and now we have business segments: automotive, in-
technologies that can respond to vari- dustrial, decorative, and marine coat-
ous ground problems and disasters. ings. We want to achieve growth in
These are the technologies we believe every segment. So, if you ask which
in the near future we can export to one is most important, my answer
Asian countries as they start to need would be all of them.”
more of these things.” A developer of industrial, auto-
Indeed, all structures need heavy- motive, construction and decorative
duty paint to stand the test of time. coatings, Kansai Paint is another paint
And Japan’s paint manufacturers are company looking to strengthen its
also expanding in Asia, offering high- presence in Asia, both in the B2B and
quality products to support the dura- B2C segments.
bility of infrastructure projects. “Asia is such a massive market that
Nippon Paint manufactures long- it is impossible to treat all nations with
lasting and heavy-duty coatings for the same strategy. Since every coun-
roads, steel works and bridges, ma- try is at a different stage of develop-
rine vessels, oil and gas pipelines, in- ment, we have learnt to cater for all
dustrial plants and automobiles. With segments and stages,” says Kansai’s
60 percent of its sales coming from president, Mr. Hiroshi Ishino.
Asia, Nippon is poised to beneit from “The success of our strategy resides
the region’s construction and infra- in creating strong local partnerships
4 JAPAN SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION
companies across all segments of the ing Asian countries a target market
food industry are looking to boost with many beneits for Japan,” says
their bottom lines by satisfying the president, Yoshisato Kikuchi. “The
growing Asian middle class’ appetite Asian market is seen as the market
for high-quality and healthier food. with the most advantages because
“Currently Asia is the fastest grow- of the close locality and similarities in
ing economic block in the world with cuisine culture. Our rice cookers are
an expanding middle-income class, currently our most popular devices,
which are ideal conditions for our and we are currently focusing on new
business,” says Masayoshi Mizuno, innovations to further develop our
President of Hokuto Corp. rice cookers.”
“I do feel that within the Asian “We initially program our rice cook-
Q“Currently Asia is the Q“The Asian market is seen
region, Japan has a reputation and is ers to best suit the country for which
acknowledged for always producing it is destined to be sold in. Customers
fastest growing economic as the market with the most
and delivering high-quality products are then advised as to the different block in the world with an advantages because of the
that are safe and secure. Hence, when uses of the rice cooker. For example, expanding middle-income close locality and similarities
consumers are posed with the ques- some of our products can also cook class, which are ideal in cuisine culture. Our rice
tion whether to choose a cheaper bread, oatmeal and brown rice. We conditions for our business. cookers are currently our
product or the safest one, I think they adjust our product’s features to suit
would deinitely go for the latter op- the choices and preferences of our
One of our key strengths most popular devices, and we
tion; that is one of Japan’s strengths in clients.” is our ability to promote are currently focusing on new
order to gain customer’s trust.” Aside from popular rice cookers, high quality and healthy innovations to further develop
Hokuto Corp. is principally en- the company also makes a number products” our rice cookers”
gaged in the manufacture and sale of other kitchen items such as ther-
of different varieties of mushrooms mal flasks, food containers and water Masayoshi Mizuno, Yoshisato Kikuchi,
such shitake and Bunashimeji, as well heaters. While Tiger no doubt faces President, Hokuto Corp. President, Tiger Corp.
as the sale of cultivating machinery, competition in the Asian market, Mr.
wrapping machinery and materials, Kikuchi believes its competitive advan-
as well as wrapping materials, con- tage is the high quality of its products,
tainers and machinery for food and which, much like the Japanese peo-
other products. ple, live longer than those from other
“Concerning the manufacturing countries.
of mushrooms and in terms of the “Japanese food is increasingly be-
Asian people’s diet, they are more coming popular and it does enjoy a
focused on consuming mushroom healthy image. American people may
related products than other parts of eat rice at a sushi restaurant but not
the world. Therefore, from that per- at home. The largest market for our
spective, it is easier for us to enter the rice cookers is people with an Asian
Asian market,” adds Mr. Mizuno. background.
“One of our key strengths is our “There are a number of selling
ability to promote high-quality and points which make our products a bet-
healthy products. Take the example ter choice. To begin with, our products
of the Bunashimeji: irst, we begin to have high-quality operations and are
explain what it is, what are its qualities produced using substantially higher
and advantages, how it is prepared quality materials than lower priced
and inally how it can be incorporated ones from competitors. The life expec-
into different dishes. Asian consumers tancy of our products is simply longer.
used this information, started to buy “Since Tiger was founded some 94
more and incorporate them into their years ago, we have always aimed at
meals.” creating new products that are either:
While companies like Hokuto are one, not currently available in the mar-
bringing high-quality food to the ket; or two, that add higher value to
Asian market; Tiger Corp aims to existing product. We have maintained
leverage on the growing demand for this value throughout our history.
high-quality kitchen wares from Asia’s While our industry has always been
expanding middle-classes. One thing highly competitive, we don’t consider
Japan shares with the rest of Asia is a it important to compete in terms of
love of rice; and Tiger Corp is one of pricing. Instead, we believe in produc-
the world’s leading manufacturers of ing higher added-value products that
rice cookers. may be reflected in a slightly higher
“From Japan´s perspective, Asia price bracket. The popularity of our
has similar food habits to ourselves products therefore adds to our com-
and enjoys a preferable location; mak- pany’s value.”
6 JAPAN SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION
While global M&A activity has been Abenomics was implemented. gic M&A; two, engaging in aggres- Q“In a matter of years,
slowing down, Japanese irms are The ALCONIX Group – a com- sive business investments; and three,
ALCONIX has grown into
aggressively acquiring assets and pany that through its subsidiaries fostering and keeping employees
establishing subsidiaries overseas. and afiliates at home and abroad, with highly specialized expertise.”
one of the industry’s major
Japan Inc. has traditionally shied specializes in the trading and manu- The move into acquiring manu- corporate groups. We believe
away from international M&As. But facturing of various non-ferrous facturing companies has really paid that this growth comes from
the dwindling domestic market and metal products, rare earths and off for the company. In its forecast our successes in: one,
aging population has forced them raw materials – adopted an interna- for FY2017 (the inancial year ending conducting strategic M&A;
to leave their comfort zone, leading tional M&A strategy back in 2001, on March 31, 2018), sales of manu-
to a surge of M&A activity in recent after it merged with Mizuho Capital facturing companies will represent a
two, engaging in aggressive
years in a bid to enhance competi- following a management buyout. mere 15 percent of the total gross business investments; and
tiveness and growth. Since then, the company has ac- sales. However, the ordinary proit three, fostering and keeping
In December 2012, Shinzo Abe quired assets in the U.S., Europe, from its manufacturing arm will ac- employees with highly
was elected as Prime Minister and China and South-East Asia. Today count for 64 percent of total proit, specialized expertise”
began implementing his Abenomics about 60 percent of ALCONIX’s according to Mr. Masaki.
agenda that, amongst other things, 200-billion-yen annual turnover “This mirrors the success of pur- Eiitsu Masaki, President and
encouraged Japanese companies to comes from foreign trade, and that chasing manufacturing companies. CEO, ALCONIX Corp.
internationalize. Since then, Japanese igure is expected to increase in the Despite the fact that the trading
irms have made a record of more future. component represents the majority in local manufacturing companies
than $350 billion of overseas acqui- “Having a core business back- of our business, proits come essen- and collecting the proits from the
sitions. By value, Japan closed nearly ground in trading, we started by ac- tially from manufacturing,” he adds. products we forward them repre-
three times more outbound deals in quiring trading companies and ex- Due to its proximity and high sents great business potential,” ex-
2016 – about $100bn worth – than panded the trading business. Then potential market growth, South- plains Mr. Masaki.
it did during the whole of the 1980s; in around 2009, we started acquir- East Asia has been a natural target “The model we are implement-
with overseas M&As accounting for ing manufacturing companies with for Japan Inc. ALCONIX’s strategy ing in South-East Asian countries
70 percent of total M&A activity. In a special focus for the ones that in the region has focused on buy- aims at lessening the importance
2017, M&As of foreign entities by produced parts and components ing manufacturing companies and of Japanese production by promot-
Japanese companies increased 5.7 from non-ferrous metals,” says Ei- establishing factories, bringing the ing local domestic trade to increase
percent to 672 deals, hitting a record itsu Masaki, President and CEO of qualities of Japanese Monozukuri regional independence. From an
high for the fourth consecutive year. ALCONIX Corp. to its South East Asian neighbors. investor’s perspective, South-East
Some Japanese companies have “In a matter of years, ALCONIX “In South-East Asia, we under- Asia is a reliable region for invest-
been in the game longer than oth- has grown into one of the industry’s stand that commodities trading is ments. At ALCONIX, our objective
ers, recognizing the potential for major corporate groups. We believe not a sustainable business practice. is to spread the quality of our mo-
business growth through interna- that this growth comes from our We therefore started working closer nozukuri to the region by educating
tional acquisitions a decade before successes in: one, conducting strate- with local communities – investing the local labor force.”
FORBES ASIA
Era of Greed:
March 11, 1985
BY ABRAM BROWN
FAST-FORWARD
Conqueror Carl
1985: Already one of America’s most feared corporate
raiders, Carl Icahn embarks on a high-profile but ill-fated
purchase of Trans World Airlines. By 1992 it’s bankrupt.
2018: With his TWA diiculties long behind him, Icahn—
restyled as an “activist investor”—is now the planet’s
73rd-richest person, with a net worth of $17 billion.
AMAZING AD
Good Olds Days
General Motors’
Oldsmobile division
posted record sales
in 1985 for the third
straight year; its Cutlass
Ciera and Cutlass
L TO R: WILF DOYLE/ALAMY; HANS VON NOLDE/AP; AP
LOGISTICS
D
ecades ago, Bradley Jacobs studied math and piano way and France’s Norbert Dentressangle, a top player in the more ef-
(classical and jazz) at Bennington and Brown be- icient European logistics market, Jacobs turned of the spigot and
fore dropping out to make money. Now the bald- returned to headquarters to focus on making the whole thing work.
ing 61-year-old CEO of XPO Logistics invokes that Headquarters is a single-story uninished concrete building on the
background to explain how he’s parlayed sequential edge of Greenwich, where glass walls mean employees can’t duck Ja-
roll-ups in the gritty businesses of garbage collection, heavy equip- cobs’ view and “Results matter” slogans hang on conference room
ment rentals and delivering stuf into a $2.6 billion net worth. “Any- walls. “Missing quarters to me is like termites. Where there’s one
one can buy a company. You just have to sign a contract and wire the there’s more,’’ Jacobs lectures. Matthew Adams, an analyst at Orbis
money,’’ he says. But conceiving how those acquired company parts Investment Management, XPO’s largest outside shareholder, with
can be integrated into an organically growing entity takes a special a $2 billion stake, says of the entrepreneur: “You have the inancial
creative talent. “Even though I’m not writing a song [in integrating sophistication of a great capital allocator, combined with someone
companies], I’m thinking of ideas that are abstract. It’s a combina- who’s also a true operator.”
tion of math and music. I’m visualizing them as clearly as I possibly Jacobs has hardly sworn of acquisitions; with XPO’s leverage re-
can in space and time and then actually executing on them.” duced by half since 2015, he brags about having $8 billion in “dry
If that sounds a tad highfalutin, consider this: In September 2011 powder.” But these days he’s talking up organic growth and the
Jacobs’ family investment irm ponied up $62.5 million to gain con- $450 million a year XPO is pouring into automation and technolo-
trol of Express-1, a Michigan-based freight expediter doing $170 gy. Of its 95,000 employees, 1,700 are tech professionals, including
million in sales a year. He renamed Express-1 ater its XPO stock 100 data quants. “Anything we can automate, we are either automat-
symbol, moved its headquarters to Connecticut and over four years ing already or we have on the drawing board to automate,” he says.
spent more than $7 billion on 17 acquisitions. Today XPO’s stock In addition to pricing algorithms, XPO has developed the Uber-
trades at $102, giving it a market cap of $12.3 billion, for a com- like apps Drive XPO and Ship XPO, which allow truckers to pick up
pound annual return of 38% under Jacobs’ watch. hat’s more than loads and customers to see their cargo move in real time.
double the S&P’s return and better than Amazon’s. “Back in the 1990s I wrote reports saying FedEx is a technolo-
Jacobs’ stake is worth $2 billion, making up the bulk of his for- gy company disguised as a transportation company. Today the same
tune, which includes a 50-acre Greenwich estate, a 17,000-square- could be said about XPO,’’ observes analyst Donald Broughton, who
foot Palm Beach waterfront mansion just down the road from Pres- tracks transportation companies at his own St. Louis-based irm.
ident Trump’s Mar-a-Lago, and a starter modern art collection with
works by Picasso, de Kooning, Calder and Lichtenstein. FOR MOST OF HIS CAREER, Jacobs has been doing deals. His father
Truth is, corporate roll-ups have a bad rep. Some operators have was a jeweler in Providence, but college dropout Jacobs was drawn
overpaid, taken on too much debt or even cooked the books. Yet 14 to the big proits being made in oil as prices spiked in the late 1970s.
of 16 analysts covering XPO rate it a buy, persuaded by Jacobs’ deal- He read up on oil brokers and then cold-called his way into the busi-
making smarts, his execution and his vision of an integrated logis- ness, enlisting the legendary Ludwig Jesselson, head of commodi-
tics company that uses technology to capitalize on the growth of ty house Phillip Brothers, as a mentor. (Jesselson’s son is now XPO’s
e-commerce and the worldwide supply chain. Ater Jacobs’ acquisi- lead independent director.) Eventually Jacobs moved to London
tion run, XPO has strong positions in the U.S. and Europe in freight (where he met his oil-trader wife, Lamia) and made millions by se-
brokerage, last-mile delivery (getting heavy goods like refrigerators curing oil from places like Russia and Nigeria and chartering ships
from warehouses to consumers), less-than-truckload shipping and to transport it to Europe. By 1989, however, futures markets were
contract logistics (handling all of a company’s logistics). Last year it squeezing the proits of globe-trotting arbitragers like Jacobs, and he
netted $312 million ($2.45 per diluted share) on $15.4 billion in rev- returned to the U.S. to research his next venture.
enues. Free cash low increased 77% to $374 million in 2017, and Jacobs settled on waste hauling ater reading an analyst’s report
XPO projects it will top $600 million in 2018. describing fat proits at Browning-Ferris. Looking for both talent
Signiicantly, ater leveraging up in 2015 to buy U.S. trucker Con- and inside dope, he interviewed dozens of industry managers. Two
former Browning-Ferris execs told him the company had ignored take URI private but couldn’t get the money. Yet since his departure
rural areas. Jacobs hired them and went on an acquisition tear, con- from URI, Jacobs’ vision for that roll-up has been vindicated: he
solidating hundreds of mom-and-pop collectors with overlapping stock now trades at $180, for a market cap of $15 billion.
routes in areas like southern Kentucky and Michigan. He took Unit- It took a bit longer for Jacobs to ind his next target industry. In
ed Waste public in 1992 and sold it in 1997 (to what later became 2011 he began assembling a team of logistics insiders to capitalize on
Waste Management) for $2.2 billion, netting $120 million on his what he frames as a highly fragmented but growing $3 trillion global
original $3 million investment. market for moving goods. His thesis: Companies don’t want to own
As that sale closed, Jacobs was working with investment bank- their logistics headaches and will happily turn the worry over to
ers on his next roll-up play: heavy equipment rentals. He liked it, he an outit like XPO that ofers everything from intermodal and full-
says, because it was not only a fragmented market but also a grow- truckload shipping to partial-load shipping, distribution warehouses
ing one, as companies switched from owning to renting equipment and deliveries of heavy goods to a consumer’s door.
like bulldozers, generators and scissor lits. He invested $35 million Jacobs purposely started out in a capital-light niche of the mar-
and in December 1997 took United Rentals public. By March he ket. Freight brokers like Express-1 don’t own trucks; they’re middle-
had raised a total of $285 million in two oferings, retaining a 42% men connecting shippers with truckers. But that was only a beach-
stake. Jacobs traveled the country tearing out Yellow Pages listings head for staging acquisitions. Ater lining up more inancing, Jacobs
to ind mom-and-pop rental shops to buy. Ater hundreds of deals, snapped up 3PD, which gave him a presence in home deliveries and
URI passed Hertz to become the world’s largest equipment renter. installations; intermodal shipping outit Pacer; and contract logistics
But in 2004 the Securities & Exchange Commission began inves- leader New Breed, which has such blue-chip customers as Disney,
tigating URI’s accounting practices. Two former top execs eventually Boeing and Verizon. A big push now is cross-selling between units.
pleaded guilty to fudging the books from 2000 to 2002 to meet earn- Jacobs says 94 of XPO’s 100 top customers buy multiple lines of ser-
ings forecasts. Jacobs was never implicated in wrongdoing, and in vice from it, up from 86 a year ago.
July 2007 private equity irm Cerberus agreed to buy URI for $4 bil- And if the economy turns? Say this for Jacobs: He gets the value
JAMEL TOPPIN FOR FORBES
lion, or $34.50 a share, a 25% premium, plus the assumption of $2.6 of improvisation. “In jazz, if you hit a wrong note, there’s no such
billion in debt. Jacobs, then URI’s chairman, resigned and went of thing as a wrong note. hat’s the note, that’s the reality. You radi-
to run his private investment company. Five months later, as credit cally accept that, and you build on it,” he rifs. “Music is really busi-
markets tightened, Cerberus lost its inancing and backed out of the ness. . . . You have to be using all of your senses at the same time, and
deal. URI’s stock eventually fell below $5; Jacobs himself wanted to you have to be dancing with the circumstances and evolving.” F
ALLEN LAW
A GENER ATION E ME R GE S
From Bellhop
to CEO
Hong Kong’s Law family bought a hotel on a whim and now
boasts an entire chain, thanks to dad letting his son run the show.
BY JANE A. PETERSON
A
llen Law was 24 and had just inished a bach- portfolio will boast 16 hotels. Park Hotel owns 6 of them, holds
elor’s degree in math and management at King’s a stake in another and manages all of them. hey’re a mix of
College London. He was planning to stay abroad luxury, upscale and midscale, and they’ll span 11 cities in eight
when his father, Law Kar Po, called with a tempt- countries. “Our strength is unique,” he says. “We invest and
ing proposal: return home to Hong Kong im- operate. We understand the entire cycle, A to Z.”
mediately and run his newly purchased hotel. “Dad said, ‘We Allen says the group’s hotel revenue last year approached
know nothing about hotels and we are too old to learn,’ ” recalls $135 million, nearly 17% more than 2016. hat doesn’t include
Allen. “I decided to take up the challenge. I lew back.” revenue for the retail and food & beverage parts of the busi-
hat was 2003, the middle of the SARs crisis, and Kar Po ness, which he declines to disclose. He also won’t provide net
had picked up the Park Hotel brand and its one 16-story hotel proit igures. But the hotels are certainly a valuable asset—
at the bargain price of $67 million. he following months were they account for nearly half of Kar Po’s estimated $5 billion in
a blur for the younger Law as he embarked on a crash course wealth, which ranked him No. 18 on Forbes Asia’s list of Hong
in hotel management, working two shits at the Park Hotel Kong’s 50 richest in January.
Hong Kong in the heart of Kowloon’s Tsim Sha Tsui district. Expansion and diversiication ramped up last year. Park
He learned every job, beginning with the bellhop’s, and became Hotel opened three hotels it manages: two in Singapore—the
the general manager in 18 months. “In the beginning, you feel upscale Park Hotel Farrer Park and its irst midscale venue,
MUNSHI AHMED FOR FORBES
thrown into the deep end of the ocean,” he says, his accent and the Destination Singapore Beach Road—and the luxury Grand
manner notably Cantonese. “But you learn how to swim.” Park Kodhipparu Maldives resort, in which the group holds a
Now 38, Allen is chief executive of the family’s privately 30% stake. Up next: the newly built Park Hotel Yeongdeungpo,
held Park Hotel Group and passionate about the hotel business. Seoul, which was set to open in 2017 but has been delayed until
He and the group are based in Singapore and come 2019, the the second half of this year, and upscale hotels in both Adelaide
ALLEN LAW
RULE OF LAW
Filial commitments run deep for Allen Law, and he says he visits Hong Kong frequently
to spend time with his parents and many other relatives. A member of the family’s third
generation, Allen has two sisters and some 20 cousins. During his childhood, he recalls,
there were big family gatherings on Sundays where everyone spoke Cantonese. He said
the patriarch, Law Ting-pong, endowed his six children and their ofspring with the family’s
core value: “Do good business and then individually do good to society.”
Ting-pong was Allen’s first employer. As a teenager he spent summers working in the
family’s garment factory in New Kowloon and learning the business—from making yarn
to sewing clothes for top brands in the U.S. and Europe. He’s quick to point out that his
grandfather was a self-made tycoon. Ting-pong had come from China in his early 30s with
nothing and began as a gardener. He didn’t achieve material success until after decades of
hard work and some luck, eventually opening the factory and then starting Bossini Interna-
tional, a listed clothing-store chain.
Apart from chairing Park Hotel Group, Allen’s father, Law Kar Po, invests in non-hotel Patriarch Law Ting-pong’s advice to his
properties and other assets as managing director of Lobo Investment. Allen’s older sister, grandson: “Whatever you do, dream big.”
Wendy Law, a lawyer, is active in the family business, overseeing the clan’s real estate
investments.
Kar Po’s brothers carry on the family’s garment heritage. Elder brother Kenneth Lo runs apparel manufacturer Crystal Interna-
tional, which went public in November and supplies retailers such as Uniqlo and H&M. A younger brother, Ka Sing, and his wife own
67% of Bossini, and his wife is chairman.
Allen calls himself a “freethinker,” rather disconnected from organized religion but loyal to his family’s values and financial legacy.
“From day one I told myself, ‘I am the third generation, I won’t let the business fail,’ ” he says. “I need to protect and preserve wealth—
that’s always in the back of my mind.” —J.P.
and Melaka, which are scheduled to open by the end of next part of the market growing much faster than upscale segments.
year. To catch this wave of new travelers, particularly Millennials,
Meanwhile, Allen is hunting for more acquisitions, par- Park Hotel plans to roll out its midscale Destination brand in
ticularly in and around Singapore, which is already home to major cities.
roughly half the group’s annual revenue. “he next three years While Allen has a largely free hand in managing the busi-
look extremely positive,” he says, sipping a midmorning cofee ness, hotel acquisitions are a family afair. “My father gets
in a quiet corner of the luxury Grand Park Orchard, the group’s involved only with major investments and divestments,” he
crown jewel in the city. says, noting that his father, who serves as chairman, has never
Looking back, Allen sees his life as divided among his three vetoed a hotel purchase Allen wanted to make. Law Po, 69,
favorite places: Hong Kong, Singapore and the U.K., where he declined to be interviewed.
moved for boarding school and now spends part of every sum- Allen recalls the early days in 2005 when the pair far outbid
mer. he split seems to feature in his thinking about where to local competitors to buy an old four-star hotel that became the
focus Park Hotel’s expansion. While Singapore and Hong Kong Grand Park Orchard. “We didn’t know anything about Singa-
are prime targets for growth, Law’s aspirations are wider. He’s pore,” he says, thinking back to his arrival from Hong Kong
looking to manage and buy more hotels throughout the region, with just one suitcase. “he silver lining: We could look at the
including gateway cities in Japan and Australia. But also on property with fresh eyes and no baggage.”
his radar: a hotel acquisition in London that could launch an What did the pair see? “A fantastic freehold property smack
eventual European operation. in downtown,” he answers, adding that straightaway they could
“I dare to dream big,” says Allen, his boyish face cracking see a clear upside. he retail space, which included a karaoke
a smile. He credits his grandfather Law Ting-pong, the clan’s bar and a Singtel shop, could be upgraded to generate enough
founding tycoon, with that two-word mandate just before of a return alone to recoup their initial investment of $185
his death in 1996 at age 84 (see box, above). “He told me, ‘Do million. As for the rather tired hotel, when upgraded it would
whatever your heart wants, but whatever you do, dream big.’ ” be a draw for travelers aiming to stay in the heart of Singapore’s
In times of challenge, says Allen, he falls back on those words. shopping district, not far from the Central Business District
CHU MING-HOI/SCMP
Expanding in Asia would take advantage of the rising hotel and a stone’s throw from the private Mount Elizabeth Hospital
revenue in the region that’s forecast for the next ten years as & Medical Center.
more Asians join the middle class, boosting tourism and the Allen moved Park Hotel’s headquarters to Singapore in
demand for rooms. hat includes midscale accommodations, a 2005, believing that it held more potential for expansion
Kirsten
Green, 46
MIDA S LIST NO. 77
FOUNDER, Forerunner
Ventures
ASSETS UNDER MANAGEMENT:
$300 million
NOTABLE DEALS: Dollar Shave
Club, Jet.com, Glossier
1 8
2 7 9
3 4 6
5
12
20 21
10 11
15
16 18
13 14 17
19
22 23
27
24 28
26
25
1. Jennifer Carolan Reach Capital 2. Jocelyn Goldfein Zetta Venture Partners 3. Rebecca Kaden Union Square Ventures 4. Trae Vassallo Defy 5. Wayee Chu Reach
Capital 6. Maha Ibrahim Canaan 7. Kara Nortman Upfront Ventures 8. Dana Settle Greycroft 9. Stephanie Palmeri Uncork Capital 10. Eurie Kim Forerunner Ventures
11. Theresia Gouw Aspect Ventures 12. Patricia Nakache Trinity Ventures 13. Stacey Bishop Scale Venture Partners 14. Sarah Tavel Benchmark 15. Jenny Lefcourt
Freestyle Capital 16. Ann Miura-Ko Floodgate 17. Anu Hariharan Y Combinator 18. Renata Quintini Lux Capital 19. Mar Hershenson Pear VC 20. Shauntel Poulson
Reach Capital 21. Jodi Sherman Jahic Aligned Partners 22. Leah Busque Fuel Capital 23. Eva Ho Fika Ventures 24. Megan Quinn Spark Capital 25. Aileen Lee Cowboy
Ventures 26. Kirsten Green Forerunner Ventures 27. Jess Lee Sequoia Capital 28. Emily Melton DFJ. Not pictured: Amy Banse Comcast Ventures; Jennifer Fonstad
Aspect Ventures; Chian Gong Reach Capital; Dana Grayson New Enterprise Associates; Nairi Hourdajian Canaan; Jocelyn Kinsey DFJ; Katie Rae the Engine; Kristina
Shen Bessemer Venture Partners.
Aileen Lee, 48
MIDA S LIST NO. 9 7
FOUNDER, Cowboy Ventures
ASSETS UNDER MANAGEMENT: $100 million
NOTABLE DEALS: Bloom Energy, Dollar Shave Club,
Rent the Runway
Ann Miura-Ko, 41
MIDA S L I ST N O. 5 5
COFOUNDER, Floodgate
ASSETS UNDER MANAGEMENT: $500 million
NOTABLE DEALS: Lyft, Refinery29, Xamarin
ing Cowboy Ventures in 2012. Cowboy sponse appeared in her inbox, from Se- male-dominated industries in America.
had only recently broken into the top tier quoia Capital’s Jess Lee, who’d become he number of female partners in ven-
of venture capital and was in the midst of a partner in that blue-chip irm nine ture actually declined following the dot-
investing its second fund of $60 million. months before. “In. Let’s do it,” she re- com bust, falling from 10% in 1999 to
Leading an activist movement could be a plied. “hank you for leading the charge, 6% in 2014, according to a Babson Col-
business risk. But she decided that if she Aileen. I’m happy to help organize/host/ lege survey. hat number has rebound-
didn’t speak up then, she never would. be your logistics slave.” One by one, 20 ed to about 9% today, but at 74% of U.S.
She hit “send” just ater 11 p.m. on other women on the email followed suit. venture funds there are no women deci-
July 31. hirty minutes later, the irst re- Tech investing is among the most sion makers; at 53% of the largest funds,
change in this old boy network, it could vate rounds valuing companies at $400 mil- 2 Bill Gurley /7
BENCHMARK
lion or more. Neil Shen, seen on our 2014 Forbes
serve as a model for hidebound industries Uber
Asia cover (right), is
around the world. No. 1, thanks to invest- 3 Jim Goetz /1
SEQUOIA CAPITAL
She had one thing going for her. Four ments that include Ali- WhatsApp
women on her initial email blast rank baba, Meituan Dianping, 4 Carl Gordon /8
among the world’s most powerful venture JD.com and, recently, ORBIMED
Acerta
capitalists: Ann Miura-Ko (No. 55 on this an exit through online
lending platform Ppdai 5 Robert Nelsen /16
year’s Midas List), Kirsten Green (No. 77), ARCH VENTURE PARTNERS
Group, which raised $221 Juno Therapeutics
heresia Gouw (No. 89) and herself. And
million in an IPO on the 6 Mary Meeker /6
there were also up-and-comers like Sequoia’s NYSE in November 2017. KLEINER PERKINS CAUFIELD & BYERS
Airbnb
Jess Lee, Union Square’s Rebecca Kaden and
Sarah Tavel from Benchmark. As champions 7 Peter Fenton /3
BENCHMARK
of entrepreneurial capitalism and free enter- he group is in talks with her personal of- Docker
prise, these women knew that if they seized ice, Pivotal Ventures, to formalize its sup- 8 J.P. Gan /30
QIMING VENTURE PARTNERS
the commanding heights—by funding more port. All Raise has commitments of $2 mil- Meitu
female founders and mentoring more fe- lion from such supporters as Silicon Valley 9 Douglas Leone /9
SEQUOIA CAPITAL
male investors—they would be impossi- Bank. ServiceNow
ble to ignore. Protesting the power structure Like a startup itself, All Raise faces risk 10 Brian Singerman /5
might generate one-day headlines. To cata- as it builds on early success. Its volunteer FOUNDERS FUND
Stemcentrx
lyze change over a period of decades, they
11 Eric Paley /31
needed to become the power structure. J.P. GAN FOUNDER COLLECTIVE
Uber
Called All Raise, the group, now with
Picture 12 Mike Maples Jr. /20
36 women, granted Forbes exclusive access Perfect FLOODGATE
as they try to rewrite their industry’s play- Okta
His rapid rise to the
book. he stated mission is to double the Midas List’s Top 10 13 Kui Zhou /25
SEQUOIA CAPITAL CHINA
percentage of women in VC partner roles comes from invest- New Dada
over the next ten years and increase total ments in picture- 14 Roelof Botha /34
VC funding to female founders from 15% editing app Meitu SEQUOIA CAPITAL
and e-commerce Square
to 25% in ive years. All Raise was already platform Meituan- 15 Byron Deeter /39
the invisible hand behind two of tech’s big- Dianping. —A. Knapp BESSEMER VENTURE PARTNERS
Twilio
gest diversity eforts in recent months: the
16 Scott Sandell /24
mentoring series Female Founder Office NEW ENTERPRISE ASSOCIATES
MuleSoft
Hours and a 700-startup pledge for diversity members will have to scale carefully and
called Founders for Change, featuring tech avoid burnout while working within an in- 17 Rob Hayes /21
FIRST ROUND CAPITAL
billionaires like Instagram founder Kevin dustry known for its resistance to change. Uber
Systrom and Dropbox CEO Drew Houston. Should they succeed, All Raise’s members 18 Dennis Phelps /45
INSTITUTIONAL VENTURE PARTNERS
Two startups have already secured fund- have the chance not just to open the eyes of Snap
ing because of All Raise. Education-sav- an industry but also to kickstart a transfor- 19 Josh Kopelman /35
FIRST ROUND CAPITAL
ings service CollegeBacker raised $75,000 mation of American business, where shock- Flatiron Health
toward its seed inancing thanks to a meet- ingly only 6% of the biggest publicly traded 20 Hans Tung /19
ing at the Female Founder event. Agentolo- companies are led by women. GGV CAPITAL
Musical.ly
gy, a fast-growing maker of real estate sot-
21 Neeraj Agrawal /17
ware, raised a $12 million round led by an AT THE ALL RAISE February meetup in San BATTERY VENTURES
PORTRAIT ILLUSTRATIONS BY LOUISE POMEROY FOR FORBES
Coupa
All Raise member acting on a tip from an- Francisco, Medha Agarwal rushes to thank
other. And through a private database of in- her cohost and fellow venture capitalist 22 Joe Lonsdale /88
8VC
terested female tech leaders—dozens strong Maha Ibrahim, a partner at Canaan who in- Wish
and growing—these groups are not just re- vests out of an $800 million fund. 23 Xiaojun Li /13
IDG CAPITAL
butting irms that say they can’t ind women; For more than four hours, Agarwal and Xiaomi
they’re acting as part of the change. 92 other women hear stories from Ibrahim, 24 Xiao Ping Xu /72
ZHENFUND
Ater months of secrecy, All Raise’s Aileen Lee, Miura-Ko and others, covering Meicai
members are going public. When Melin- everything from how to speak up in partner 25 Jeffrey Jordan /18
da Gates surveyed the industry to see who meetings to when to switch irms. Agarwal, ANDREESSEN HOROWITZ
Airbnb
had the most promising plans for diversi- a midlevel principal at Redpoint Ventures,
ty and inclusion, All Raise caught her eye. a $4 billion-in-assets shop in Menlo Park,
vard Business Review report. more than 400 entrepreneurs looded so- 38 Marc Andreessen /27
ANDREESSEN HOROWITZ
In inance, that problem is exacerbat- cial media with matching black-and-white Samsara
ed by irms’ struggles to bring new women photos declaring their support, including 39 Jeremy Liew /32
LIGHTSPEED VENTURE PARTNERS
in. Historically, venture irms have blamed billionaire Airbnb Snap
the pipeline problem, infamously articulated CEO Brian Chesky 40 Mitch Lasky /40
by VC billionaire Michael Moritz in 2015: and Warby Parker BENCHMARK
Snap
Firms would love to hire women, he argued, co-CEO Neil Blu-
41 Jeremy Levine /54
but lack qualiied female candidates. “What menthal. BESSEMER VENTURE PARTNERS
Pinterest
we’re not prepared to do is lower our stan- he results were
dards,” he said. immediate. At Pat- 42 Allen Zhu /84
GSR VENTURES
he women at All Raise don’t buy it, and reon, the white- DiDi Chuxing
they’re taking action. A work group that in- hot artist crowd- 43 Lee Fixel /79
TIGER GLOBAL MANAGEMENT
cludes Miura-Ko and Stephanie Palmeri of funding site, CEO Spotify
Uncork Capital, a irm with $305 million in Jack Conte asked 44 Jim Tananbaum /52
FORESITE CAPITAL
assets, has built a conidential database of its most recent in- 10X Genomics
executive women outside of the VC indus- vestor, hrive Capi- 45 Ryan Sweeney /60
RAVI MHATRE
try who are privately interested in becoming tal, to forgo a board ACCEL
Qualtrics
VCs. he work group is also tracking open seat in favor of ap- The Force Is 46 Ravi Mhatre /76
positions. It has received requests from ten pointing an inde- With Him LIGHTSPEED VENTURE PARTNERS
AppDynamics
irms already and made 25 introductions to pendent director Mhatre soars up the
ranks from his invest- 47 Hemant Taneja /70
women from the list. “We’re taking away the who would add to GENERAL CATALYST
ment in enterprise Stripe
question that you don’t know who to hire,” the board’s diversity.
software maker Mule-
says Rebecca Kaden, a partner at Union hrive agreed, and 48 Jonathan Silverstein /55
Soft, which Salesforce ORBIMED
Square Ventures, the New York irm known the job went to Chi- acquired in March for Ascendis Pharma
for early bets on Tumblr and Twitter. cago Public Media $6.5 billion. He was also 49 David Cowan /65
a major investor in App- BESSEMER VENTURE PARTNERS
Another way to drive change: through chief Goli Sheik- Twitch
Dynamics, an enterprise
the customer. McDonald’s didn’t update its holeslami. At pop- software firm bought 50 Matt Cohler /57
BENCHMARK
menu until patrons voted for healthier op- ular meditation app by Cisco for $3.7 billion Tinder
tions with their dollars, notes Jenny Lef- Headspace, CEO last year. —A. Knapp
court, a partner at Freestyle Capital, a seed- Rich Pierson says he
er. Its most public efort so far has been so founders anywhere can get access to the 70 Bryan Schreier /97
SEQUOIA CAPITAL
the popular series Female Founder Office same support. And in the fall, they hope to Dropbox
Hours, which matches women entrepre- host a big conference for women across all 71 Todd Chaffee /61
INSTITUTIONAL VENTURE PARTNERS
neurs and investors in one-on-one meet- venture roles. Twitter
ings to share startup fears and fundraising For now they’re working ater-hours as 72 Kevin Comolli /36
tips. Since November, it has hosted events volunteers, but All Raise will have to evolve ACCEL
SimpliVity
in New York, Boston, Los Angeles and San in order to last. Burnout is a real concern
73 Yi Cao /NEW
Francisco (twice). At the irst two events when people are working what can feel like SOURCE CODE CAPITAL
Bytedance
more than 800 women signed up for 80 a second job, something Spark Capital’s
slots. Ursula Mead, founder of North Caro- Megan Quinn calls a “gender tax.” Enter Sil- 74 Jenny Lee /69
GGV CAPITAL
lina-based InHerSight, a job-ratings site for icon Valley Bank and Melinda Gates. With YY
women, turned around and made immedi- the $2 million already pledged from inves- 75 Michael Eisenberg / RETURN
ALEPH
ate changes to her pitch deck ater attend- tors and more in the works, All Raise plans WeWork
ing the February Office Hours. “It gives you to hire an executive director and full-time
Aileen Lee and Jess Lee, to direct group ef- be a diverse can- 77 Kirsten Green /98
FORERUNNER VENTURES
forts and others to take on more casual roles. didate, we include Dollar Shave Club
As has proved to be the case in other in- a diversity and in- 78 Quan Zhou /63
IDG CAPITAL
dustries, success will be gradual. Forbes con- clusion review on CreditEase
tacted 125 partners in 50 male-led venture every discussion 79 Roger Ehrenberg /NEW
IA VENTURES
irms to ask their views about diversity and of every position,” The Trade Desk
hiring plans. Most didn’t respond. But lead- says billionaire
80 Navin Chaddha /73
ers from 20 irms did. “While we recognize LinkedIn cofound- MAYFIELD FUND
Lyft
er Reid Hofman at
81 Ron Conway /43
Greylock Partners. SV ANGEL
JULES MALTZ Airbnb
he women of
All Raise are coni- 82 Peter Levine /87
IPOh! ANDREESSEN HOROWITZ
dent that their in- Three of Maltz’s invest- GitHub
vesting success will ments have gone public 83 Neil Rimer /NEW
INDEX VENTURES
speak for itself in a in the past year: Dropbox Funding Circle
in March, Web marketing
sector driven by i- 84 David K. Chao /RETURN
firm Yext in April 2017, DCM
nancial return. To and enterprise software SoFi
win, they’re doing maker MuleSoft in March 85 Randy Glein /RETURN
it together—a 2017 (Salesforce subse- DFJ GROWTH
Ring
new mentality for quently bought MuleSoft
for $6.5 billion a year 86 Ted Schlein /90
women who have, KLEINER PERKINS CAUFIELD & BYERS
later). Another Maltz AppDynamics
up until the launch investment, Slack, could
of All Raise, largely 87 Jules Maltz /NEW
soon IPO too. —K.C. INSTITUTIONAL VENTURE PARTNERS
Icarus producer David Fialkow and director succeeded alone. Yext
Bryan Fogel at the 2018 Oscars with “I’m a capitalist. I 88 Mamoon Hamid /86
presenters Greta Gerwig and Laura Dern. KLEINER PERKINS CAUFIELD & BYERS
want to win the best deals. I want my irm Slack
to win the best deals,” says Emily Melton, a 89 Theresia Gouw /74
Oscar Meets partner at DFJ. “But other than that I want ASPECT VENTURES
ForeScout
F
amed venture capitalist Jim Brey- investor) is tapping blockchain
er made his fortune largely by in- technology to create a common
vesting in Silicon Valley. Now he health care database that every
is increasingly looking East, where op- doctor and patient can access
portunities are beckoning in China. no matter which service provid-
he billionaire investor (No. 57 on er they use. Paige.AI, which land-
the Midas List), best known for his ed $25 million in funding led
early bet on Facebook, has a long his- by Breyer Capital in February, is
tory of investing in the Middle King- combining blockchain and artii-
dom. hrough a partnership with local cial intelligence to develop com-
investment irm IDG Capital—an or- puter models for early cancer di-
ganization he irst got to know during agnosis. his would be a major
a 2004 trip to China and now serves as asset in China as patient infor-
lead strategic advisor—Breyer backed mation there remains far more
Chinese tech powerhouses, including fragmented among its one mil-
ride-sharing irm Didi Chuxing and lion health care facilities. Data
smartphone maker Xiaomi. Today he is and diagnostic information isn’t
looking closely at a number of potential always shared efficiently and is
investments in areas including block- oten handwritten, making it
chain, health care and inancial servic- more difficult to track.
es, allocating tens of millions of dollars a “A lot of underlying block-
year—or a third of Breyer Capital’s total chain technologies in China have “Many of the best technology entrepreneurs and
funds—to promising startups in the uses in very speciic areas,” Brey- leaders I met are from China,” says Breyer.
world’s second-largest economy, he told er said. “Most of the early signif-
Forbes during a recent interview. icant winners in blockchain will be in goal is nurturing irms that can com-
Of particular interest is blockchain, the areas of intech. At the same time, I pete internationally, Shong says.
the technology underpinning digi- see opportunities in health care services And Breyer knows where to look for
tal coin transactions that is essential- and payments in large.” advice on Beijing’s policy whims. In ad-
ly about building secured data stor- What’s more, China’s growing tal- dition to IDG, Breyer has built a rela-
age across multiple computers. hough ent pool is a big attraction. Its universi- tionship with China’s Tsinghua Univer-
China banned initial coin oferings ties are producing top-notch talents in sity, where he sits on the advisory board
last year out of fear of illegal fundrais- areas like blockchain and artiicial in- of the School of Economics & Man-
ing activities, it still “greatly supports” telligence. “Many of the best technolo- agement. Other members include Chi-
blockchain-related research, said Hugo gy entrepreneurs and leaders I met are na’s central bank governor Zhou Xiao-
Shong, a former journalist who founded from China, and are only increasing in chuan and Alibaba founder Jack Ma,
IDG China in 1993 and is Breyer’s long- terms of quality and the depth of inno- as well as Apple CEO Tim Cook and
time partner in the country. his trans- vation,” Breyer said. Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg. Last year,
lates into opportunities for coinvest- Still, investing in the country is not board members met Chinese president
ments like the U.S. blockchain startup without its challenges. Beijing has been Xi Jinping to listen to his view on re-
Circle, which counts both Breyer Capi- tightening capital controls over the form, shortly ater Xi was given a sec-
tal and IDG among its backers in a $60 past year, imposing more caps on the ond ive-year term during an important
million fundraising round in 2016. amount of money allowed outside the party congress in October. “I spend lots
Blockchain is having an impact on country as it seeks to stem cash out- of time with Tsinghua leaders to un-
health care in the U.S. by enabling bet- lows. Breyer, however, doesn’t worry derstand their view of important initia-
ter medical data collection and record- much about this for now, as the current tives,” Breyer says. “Many Chinese and
sharing. For example, startups like Med- focus is helping the Chinese companies U.S. long-term relationships tend to
Rec (which doesn’t have Breyer as an he backed grow locally. But the ultimate fracture, so I am very lucky.” F
The Vacation
Predictor
While many bank on AI paying of in the future,
one of the world’s hottest apps, Hopper, has
raised $84 million by monetizing it right now.
BY KATHLEEN CHAYKOWSKI
O
ne of the most cutting-edge travel apps in the
world makes its home in a decidedly old-fash-
ioned setting: an active zinc factory in Montre-
al’s former garment district. Walking through times to fly and buy—alerting users at the optimal moment,
Mr. 30%
Who’s the world’s best hedge fund manager? David Tepper? Stevie
Cohen? Try Joe Edelman, a wannabe psychologist with a bead on biotech
who has quietly built the best track record of the past two decades.
BY NATHAN VARDI
I
t’s late December and Joseph Edelman is onstage at the rootop a graduate degree in pharmacology but abandoned it in 1980 to
bar at Manhattan’s Dream Downtown hotel. With gin-infused move to New York City with a vague notion of combining science
cucumber cocktails lowing and the Manhattan skyline glitter- with business. He got his M.B.A. at New York University in 1987,
ing through the windows behind him, Edelman is strumming ater studying part-time while working as a bookkeeper at an ac-
his sunburst Fender Stratocaster and belting out a credible cover of tors’ union. His next stop: Wall Street, as a research analyst cover-
Elvis Costello’s “Pump It Up.” It’s Perceptive Advisors’ annual holi- ing biotech.
day party, and Edelman’s performance is something of a victory lap. Edelman struggled in that position, because he was unable to
His lagship fund is up 41% net for 2017. form consistent opinions. He kept focusing on probabilities and
Hedge fund managers typically distinguish themselves in difer- changing his mind. “I think the stock is going higher but not that
ent ways—how much money they manage, the total amount of fees much—you can’t publish stuf like that on the sell side,” Edelman
they earn or their personal wealth. Edelman manages $3.8 billion, says of his days at Prudential Securities.
serious money but far less than other, more famous hedge funds. What Edelman really wanted to do was manage money. He
And while Edelman recently joined the three-comma club with a took a job at a small hedge fund and then started Perceptive Advi-
$1.1 billion net worth, he is outranked by at least 45 other hedge sors in 1999 ater he was able to raise $3.5 million from friends and
fund managers tracked by Forbes. Edelman’s Perceptive Life Sciences a hedge fund manager. His timing was perfect. In his irst year—in
hedge fund’s claim to fame is its astounding long-term performance. the midst of a bubbly bull market that catapulted biotech stocks up
Its annualized 30.2% net-of-fees return since its inception in 1999 102%—Perceptive returned 129%.
is the best among all human-managed hedge funds—even beating With that gale-force wind at his back, Edelman has been buying
David Tepper’s Appaloosa Management’s 25% annual return since and shorting small-to-midsize biotech stocks ever since. As with
1993. For Edelman it represents a more than 130-fold return. other funds devoted to the sector, his staf is stacked with doctors
“It is nothing short of extraordinary, and Joe has done it out of and Ph.D.s in biological sciences. But there are a lot of scientiical-
the limelight,” says Leslie Lake, a longtime Perceptive Life Scienc- ly trained geniuses parsing data on Wall Street these days. Edelman
es investor who manages $1.5 billion of hedge fund investments at claims his edge is his training in psychology. It’s why he named his
Invus Financial Advisors. “Over 18 years it’s not random. here is hedge fund Perceptive Advisors.
something in his DNA.” “Psychology is very important. here is perception and reali-
At 62, Edelman is not well-known outside of the narrow area of ty. Biotech stocks are driven by whether a drug works, if it will be
biotechnology investing. But in the world of clinical data and end- approved and if it will sell more than consensus,” Edelman says.
points, he’s a rock star whose success has enabled him to charge “hat’s an eight-year process. here are a few single days of events.
his limited partners a management fee of 3% of assets and 25% of Everything else is a perception of that event.”
proits. He cares little about size: “I want a really good track record. For Edelman it’s all about understanding the biases of mar-
hat is my scorecard,” he insists. And he believes his edge is derived ket participants. He views the stock market like a poker game: “If
mostly from his understanding of the idiosyncrasies of human a hand is going well, that doesn’t mean you shouldn’t bet more as
behavior. subsequent cards are played, even though the ‘price’ of participating
As a teenager, Edelman spent summers in the company of fa- has gone higher as the pot gets bigger,” he says.
mous scientists like two-time Nobel Prize winner Linus Pauling He is obsessed with the idea of repeat surprise—that a negative
while working at the laboratory of his father, Isidore Edelman, ini- surprise is oten followed by more negative surprises and that posi-
tially a professor at the University of California, San Francisco, and tive surprises also occur in streaks. Edelman ofers his biggest posi-
eventually chairman of biochemistry and molecular biophysics at tion, Neurocrine Biosciences, as an example. Last year the compa-
Columbia University. “I learned to have an appreciation for the sci- ny’s Ingrezza became the irst drug approved by the Food & Drug
entiic method. It’s a way of thinking, and a certain level of skepti- Administration for the treatment of a movement disorder associated
cism that you need,” Edelman says. with the long-term use of drugs for schizophrenia. Ingrezza’s irst-
Ater studying psychology at UC San Diego, Edelman pursued quarter revenue came in much higher than anticipated, but analysts
still didn’t raise estimates enough for the remainder of 2017. Edel- tion says it should go higher.” In the case of Neurocrine, Edelman
man observes that when analysts—bull or bear—are too low in their bought in at $5 and continued to buy it as high as $80. he stock
expectations, they tend to stay somewhat conservative. Bears tend to recently traded for $84.
not raise projections very far unless they are willing to do a 180 and “We are really focused on only looking forward,” Edelman says.
turn bullish. In 2017 Neurocrine kept beating expectations. “You have to take your history with the stock out of the way.”
JAMEL TOPPIN FOR FORBES
Edelman doesn’t believe in buying low and selling high either. Another unique aspect of Edelman’s approach is the sheer num-
“Only buy if the analysis indicates the stock is worth more and sell ber of positions in his portfolio—some 200—which makes his fund
if it’s worth less,” he says. “his may involve buying something back more diverse than rival index ETFs like iShares Nasdaq Biotech-
at a higher price than where you sold it if new analysis or informa- nology fund. But there is a method to Edelman’s madness. “I don’t
look at it as positions I like or don’t like. I think in terms of proba- wood City, California, was a game changer. When Perceptive start-
bilities and express it in position sizes,” Edelman says. ed taking a $20 million stake in the private company in 2013,
About 80% of his positions are in biotech; the rest are primarily Acerta was developing a so-called BTK inhibitor for blood can-
in medical devices or specialty pharmaceuticals. A common theme cers like mantle cell lymphoma. In 2016 AstraZeneca swooped in
is that there must be some science involved. He avoids insurers and and bought a majority stake for $4 billion, turning Perceptive’s in-
has very few Merck-like big pharmas or big hospital chains. To beat vestment into $400 million. But Edelman didn’t sell “high.” If Astra-
the market, Edelman goes “all in” on his good bets and folds when Zeneca exercises its option to buy the rest of the shares for $3 bil-
necessary, carefully sizing each position to make them count in a lion, Perceptive will score again.
way that makes sense to him. Edelman oten inds success investing in orphan drugs used to
“We have a very strong team that knows how to igure out what treat rare conditions. Part of the reason he sailed through the 2016
drugs are going to work, but what is unique is what Joe brings biotech crash was his big position in Sarepta herapeutics. he
to the table,” says Adam Stone, Perceptive’s chief investment oi- company had been developing a drug for Duchenne muscular dys-
cer. “here are a lot of brilliant scientists running portfolios nowa- trophy, a form of the muscle-wasting disease that devastates young
days, but not experienced money managers who know how to size boys. Sarepta was seeking accelerated FDA approval for a remedy,
a portfolio like Joe.” eteplirsen, which costs roughly $300,000 a year.
In 2017 Edelman made a big bet on Alnylam Pharmaceuticals, Even though eteplirsen had shown promise in a small trial, the
whose stock climbed 229% last year ater a late-stage trial revealed FDA’s medical staf was skeptical. Edelman was surprised that the
one of its drugs inhibited the activity of a gene connected to a rare market had discounted the clinical results, and he became con-
nerve disorder. he trial showed that the drug, patisiran, could vinced that top FDA oicial Janet Woodcock’s public comments
stop transthyretin production in the liver and alleviate symptoms indicated she would back accelerated approval. “Parents were un-
in patients. derstandably going crazy, the drug was safe and there was a good
Edelman and his team had worked for months on patisiran, chance there was a beneit from it,” Edelman says. “Woodcock was
and they were ready to spring into action late in 2016 when health talking to the parents, and if you read her speeches she was more
concerns arose over a diferent Alnylam drug, causing its stock to liberal than the FDA’s neurological division.” In September 2016
plunge. Edelman believed patisiran had a good chance of working eteplirsen recieved accelerated FDA approval, and Sarepta’s stock
safely and made Alnylam his biggest new position in anticipation soared.
of the clinical results in September. Currently, Edelman’s highest risk-reward position is Global
No doubt, much of Edelman’s track record can be attributed to Blood herapeutics. he California company is developing a drug
the excellent performance of health care and biotech stocks over for sickle-cell anemia. he potential reward is huge because the
the past two decades. But Edelman has proved his mettle in down standard of care in sickle-cell disease, which oten includes blood
markets as well. In 2016 biotech stocks plunged 21%, but six prof- transfusions, doesn’t work well and has numerous adverse side ef-
itable short positions and two long home runs helped his fund re- fects. Edelman thinks it’s potentially a $5 billion global market.
turn 3.8% net of fees. Last year Edelman doubled the performance Downside: It’s unclear whether Global Blood’s approach will actu-
of the stocks in the Nasdaq Biotechnology Index, which returned ally work.
21%. Edelman has had only two down years—2008 and 2002. “I don’t want to be a hedge fund manager who doesn’t take
For all his stock-picking wins, however, Acerta Pharma of Red- much risk,” Edelman says. “Otherwise, why I am doing this?” F
I
t was a good year for the super-
wealthy in Japan. he Nikkei
stock market rose 7% in the 12
months through late March, the
yen strengthened 6% against the
dollar and the country drew a record
number of foreign tourists. As a result,
80% of those on our list of Japan’s 50
Richest have larger fortunes than they
had a year ago. Some of the biggest
gains were in sotware, manufacturing,
retail and cosmetics. In total, Japan’s top
50 are worth $186 billion, up from $152
billion last year.
Masayoshi Son holds on to his spot as
No. 1 richest for the second year in a row.
Son’s telecom and investing irm Sotbank
made headlines for buying a signiicant
chunk of Uber at a discounted price in Jan-
uary. hen in late March, Uber announced
it would merge its Southeast Asian business
with Grab—a ride-hailing irm that also
counts Sotbank as an investor. His fortune
rose $1.5 billion to $21.9 billion as investors
sent shares of Sotbank higher.
he biggest gainer in dollar terms
was Takemitsu Takizaki, whose Motor-man Shigenobu Nagamori jumped six places, to $5.5 billion.
fortune climbed an impressive $5.1
billion to $17.6 billion. His Tokyo-listed sensors irm, Key- Germany’s Black Forest region. Noevir’s shares climbed some 60%
ence, is beneiting from increasing factory automation, which in the past year. he other newcomer, Eiichi Kuriwada, chairs SG
requires sensors to monitor the performance of machines and Holdings, parent of package delivery irm Sagawa Express. His late
robots. Sales growth is strong both in Japan and the U.S. father, Kiyoshi Sagawa, founded the delivery service in 1957.
Another manufacturing fortune that soared belongs to Notable drop-ofs include Naruatsu Baba, founder of
Shigenobu Nagamori, who at $5.5 billion is worth $2 billion smartphone game maker Colopl, whose shares fell slightly, and
more than a year ago. His irm Nidec makes motors and con- Kazuo Inamori, founder of manufacturing irm Kyocera. Its
trol equipment for home appliances and industrial customers stock dove in the winter on woes in the solar business.
AKIO KON/BLOOMBERG
and has operations in the U.S., Mexico, China and the U.K. Net worths are based on stock prices and exchange rates
here are two newcomers this year. Hiroshi Okura founded from March 23.
Tokyo-listed skincare and cosmetics irm Noevir Holdings, an Reported by James Simms, Anis Shakirah Mohd Muslimin,
Avon-like direct-selling irm with products inspired by a visit to Angel Au-Yeung and Chloe Sorvino.
1. MASAYOSHI SON
$21.9 BILLION
SOFTBANK AGE: 60
2. TADASHI YANAI
$19.3 BILLION S
FAST RETAILING
AGE: 69
3. NOBUTADA SAJI
$18 BILLION S
SUNTORY AGE: 72
4. TAKEMITSU TAKIZAKI
$17.6 BILLION S
KEYENCE AGE: 72
5. AKIRA MORI
$6.6 BILLION S
MORI TRUST
AGE: 81
6. SHIGENOBU NAGAMORI
$5.5 BILLION S
NIDEC AGE: 73
7. HIROSHI MIKITANI
$5.4 BILLION T
RAKUTEN AGE: 53
8. KEIICHIRO TAKAHARA
$5.2 BILLION S
UNICHARM
AGE: 87
9. AKIO NITORI
$4.8 BILLION S
NITORI AGE: 74
Tourism
Takeover
J apan has become a tourism hotspot, growing
steadily over the past ive years. In 2017, a record
28.7 million tourists visited the island nation,
contributing nearly $40 billion to the economy,
nearly 18% more than in 2016, the latter according
to the Japan Tourism Agency. Most foreign tourists
hail from Asia, with two thirds coming from South
Korea, China and Taiwan. (To approach a common
language, Masatoshi Ito’s giant 7-Eleven chain in
TAKAO YASUDA
Japan has reportedly started labeling prepared His discount retailer Don Quijote posted 9% revenue growth in 2017, partly
foods in both English and Japanese.) fueled by demand from tourists. Popular products in some stores are
labeled in English, Chinese, Korean and Thai, and stores accept payment in
From 2011 to 2015, Japan’s tourism industry foreign currencies, including Chinese yuan and Thai baht.
grew 33% per year—one of the highest rates in
the world. Relaxed visa requirements for Asian
countries and the growth of discount airlines are
likely fueling the boom, says Takeshi Akagi, head
of research in Japan for real estate advisory irm
Jones Lang LaSalle. he Japanese government aims
to attract 40 million tourists by 2020, when Tokyo
will host the Summer Olympics.
hese companies owned or run by some of
Japan’s richest—and one tycoon who hasn’t yet
32
MIL1
28.7
MIL
24
MIL
19.7
MIL
13.4
MIL
MIWAKO DATE
2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 The president of Mori Trust and her father, Chairman Akira Mori (No. 5,
1
FORECAST FROM JTB CORP. inset), are broadening the company in hospitality, partnering with
SOURCE: 2014–2017 FROM JAPAN NATIONAL TOURISM
America’s Hilton last year to build a hotel-and-timeshare resort on
ORGANIZATION. tourist-friendly Sesokojima Island in Okinawa.
$ 1.9 BILLION S
OBIC AGE: 79
SATOSHI SUZUKI:
RINGING UP BEAUTY SALES
Tapping enthusiastic influencers to sell your cosmetics
and lotions can be a pretty good business. Satoshi
Suzuki’s firm Pola Orbis has some 46,000 “Beauty
Directors” peddling the company’s skin care creams
and antiaging treatments across Japan. Sales rose
nearly 12% to $2.2 billion last year. He’s betting on
boosting business with stores in China and Hong
Kong. Also gaining in the sector are new lister Hiroshi
Okura and the Kobayashi brothers, with their firm
Kose. “Chinese consumers are buying luxury cosmetics
products in stores, online, at airport duty-free shops
and abroad where they are traveling,” says Bolor
Enkhbaatar, analyst at Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley
Securities, who adds that Chinese tourists to Japan like
the lower prices, the bigger selection and the fact that
“they can be sure the products are not fake.”
ONLINE GAMES
dent fans are in the Asia-Paciic, and esports powerhouses like Nintendo and Sony.
will be an official sport at the 2022 Asian “Japan’s inherent gaming culture
Games to be held in Hangzhou, China. provides the perfect conditions for the suc-
Videogame developer Konami—founded cessful development of esports, now that
by Kagemasa Kozuki (No. 37)—partnered obstacles to its growth have been lited by
with esports irm eFootball.Pro last year “Japan’s gaming culture provides the government,” says Jurre Pannekeet, se-
to create a professional competition using the perfect conditions for esports.” nior market analyst at Newzoo. —A.S.M.M.
T
akafumi Horie knows all about lying too et company aiming to drastically lower the cost of
43. YOSHIKO SHINOHARA
close to the sun. space-launch services. It is a work in progress. he $1.15 BILLION
he entrepreneur briely achieved launch last year of its irst rocket intended to reach TEMP HOLDINGS
AGE: 83
billionaire status and appeared on the 2005 list space ended badly, with the rocket falling into the
ocean a minute ater litof. 44. SHOJI UEHARA
of Japan’s 40 richest before the stock price of his $1.1 BILLION
internet company, Livedoor, cratered. he com- Interstellar said in December that a fund man- TAISHO PHARMACEUTICAL
HOLDINGS
pany delisted the following year. Horie spent ager, Rheos Capital Works, is the main sponsor AGE: 90
nearly two years in prison starting in 2011 for of a second light, now set for sometime in April.
45. HIROSHI ISHIBASHI
securities law violations. he irst launch attempt was inanced primarily $1.05 BILLION
Now Horie, 45, with a net worth likely less than through crowdfunding, with a target of $256,000. BRIDGESTONE
AGE: 71
$50 million, is reaching beyond earthly pursuits. In (For about a hundred grand, a donor could push
2003 he founded Interstellar Technologies, a rock- the launch button.) Horie has said costs need to 46. HAJIME SATOMI
$1.04 BILLION S
come down to the aerospace equivalent of a Honda SEGA SAMMY HOLDINGS
Super Cub moped— which costs about $2,500—to AGE: 76
HUAWEI’S ASCENT
THERE WERE NUMEROUS signs at though the overall revenue figure of $8.7 billion
Huawei’s recent launch event of its P20 is small.
flagship phone series to suggest that the Until 5G kicks in in a year or so—which Hu
Chinese tech and telecommunications says Huawei is on the verge of achieving—the
giant has made it as a premium consumer company’s fastest growing and most visibly
electronics brand: The launch was held prominent area is its smartphones. Despite
at the picturesque (and obviously not having virtually no market in the U.S., Huawei
cheap to rent) Grand Palais in Paris; more surpassed Apple as the second-biggest phone
than 2,000 members of the media were in brand in the world by units shipped, and the
attendance; Huawei billboards were plas- company’s bold strategy to ditch the mid-tier or
tered all over Europe; and, perhaps most entry-level market and focus on premium (ex-
important, the lack of surprise, shock or pensive) smartphones seems to be paying of.
disappointment over the over-$1,100 price tag of the P20 Pro. This year marks Huawei’s 30th birth-
Attendees—tech insiders, mostly—expected the top-end model of day, and the company, following the general
Huawei’s smartphones to be priced at (or even higher than) the iPhone Chinese idea that age 30 is when a boy truly
or Samsung level. And why wouldn’t they? Despite recent U.S. market becomes a man, is looking for new growth. “As
issues, Huawei phones are well received by tech writers and are, appar- we look to 2018, emerging technologies like the
ently, selling well. Internet of Things, cloud computing, artificial
In an annual business report meeting with journalists (including intelligence and 5G will soon see large-scale
myself ) held in late March at the company’s Shenzhen headquarters, application,” explains Hu. “Throughout this
Huawei announced that its total revenue grew 15.7%, to $92.5 billion, process, Huawei will . . . pay special attention
in 2017. More impressive, net profit grew 28.1%, to $7.3 billion, a huge to the practical challenges that our customers
improvement over 2016’s 0.4% rate. face as they go digital. Our job is to help them
Huawei’s Deputy Chairwoman and Chief Financial Officer Sabrina overcome these challenges and achieve busi-
Meng, along with CEO Ken Hu, told reporters there are two factors ness success. Ultimately, we aim to bring digital
that explain how the company managed to bump up net profits and net to every person, home and organization for a
profit margins at a rate higher than total revenue growth: The company fully connected, intelligent world.”
became more efficient at growing smartphone sales. “In 2016, one of the Considering the lengths to which the U.S.
biggest areas that dragged consumer business group profits down were government has gone to prevent Huawei
the high cost of components,” said Meng. “So we developed a better sup- from entering its market, it doesn’t appear
ply management chain and improved our working the company’s ambitious
relationships with vendors.” vision will include the U.S.
Hu, meanwhile, added that whether it’s brand for now. Huawei will likely
image with consumers or phone units sold, the ramp up eforts in Europe
THOMAS KUHLENBECK FOR FORBES (TOP); MARLENE AWAAD/BLOOMBERG
I
n early March, Balkrishna Doshi was Writes Doshi of his award: “My works
announced as the winner of the 2018 are an extension of my life, philosophy
Pritzker Architecture Prize, the irst and dreams trying to create [a] treasury of
Indian to win the prestigious award. the architectural spirit. I owe this presti-
Doshi, 90, though not well-known outside gious prize to my guru, Le Corbusier. His
of India, worked with 20th-century-archi- teachings led me to question identity and
tecture giants Le Corbusier and Louis Kahn. compelled me to discover new regionally
He is also an educator and an urban planner. adopted contemporary expression for a sus-
he Pritzker jurists wrote of the winner: tainable holistic habitat.”
“Over the years, Balkrishna Doshi has al- he award was created in 1979 by the
ways created an architecture that is serious, Pritzker family of Chicago—who made their
never lashy or a follower of trends. With fortune in the Hyatt Hotels chain. he Pritz-
a deep sense of responsibility and a desire ker website states that the prize is given “To
“My works are an extension of my life”:
to contribute to his country and its peo- Balkrishna Doshi, winner of the Pritzker.
honor a living architect or architects whose
ple through high-quality, authentic archi- built work demonstrates a combination of
tecture, he has created projects for public administrations and those qualities of talent, vision and commitment, which has
utilities, educational and cultural institutions, and residences produced consistent and signiicant contributions to humanity
for private clients, among others. Doshi is acutely aware of the and the built environment through the art of architecture.”
context in which his buildings are located. His solutions take Doshi will formally receive the award in May at the Aga
into account the social, environmental and economic dimen- Khan Museum in Toronto. (All of Doshi’s projects pictured here
sions, and therefore his architecture is totally engaged with are in Ahmedabad, India, with the exception of Aranya, which is
sustainability.” in Indore, India.) F
The Amdavad Ni Gufa gallery houses the work of Maqbool Fida Husain. Aranya Community Housing provides afordable housing for 80,000 people.
Doshi is founder, architect and teacher at the Centre for Environmental Planning & Technology. Doshi worked on Louis Kahn’s indian institute of Management.
Kamala House, Doshi’s home, is named after his wife. Residences built for the Life Insurance Corp. feature terraces for the smaller units.
Premabhai Hall: “A good theatre...is the extension of the most active and creative part of a city. It is a place where all artists meet and recreate a new image of life.”
Change
“Usually when “WITHOUT
people are sad, DEVIATION
they don’t do FROM THE
anything. They NORM,
PROGRESS
just cry over IS NOT
“Let reality
their condition. be reality. Let POSSIBLE.”
But when they things flow —FRANK ZAPPA
get angry, they naturally
forward in “A step backward
bring about a whatever way
after making a wrong
change.” they like.”
—LAO TZU
turn is a step in the
—MALCOLM X
right direction.”
“Change is inevitable. “A man of destiny knows —KURT VONNEGUT
In a progressive country, that beyond this hill lies
change is constant.” another and another.
ROBERT PARENT/THE LIFE IMAGES COLLECTION/GETTY IMAGES; DE AGOSTINI/BIBLIOTECA AMBROSIANA/GETTY IMAGES; SONY PICTURES CLASSICS/NEWSCOM; CLARENCE SINCLAIR BULL/JOHN KOBAL
—BENJAMIN DISRAELI The journey is never
complete.”
FOUNDATION/GETTY IMAGES; AGENCE OPALE/ALAMY; NEWSCOM; JACK MITCHELL/GETTY IMAGES; BILDAGENTUR/GETTY IMAGES; ARTUR WIDAK/GETTY IMAGES; POPPERFOTO/GETTY IMAGES
“THE HISTORY OF THE —F.W. DE KLERK
WORLD IS NONE OTHER
THAN THE PROGRESS
OF THE CONSCIOUSNESS
“Slide the weight from
OF FREEDOM.”
your shoulders and
—G.W.F. HEGEL
move forward.”
—BARBARA KINGSOLVER