Khoo Teck Puat
Khoo Teck Puat | |
|---|---|
邱德拔 | |
A bust of Khoo in the lobby of the Goodwood Park Hotel, Singapore | |
| Born | 13 January 1917 |
| Died | 21 February 2004 (aged 87) Singapore |
| Citizenship | Malaysian (1957–1981) Australian (1981–1994) Singaporean (1994–2004) |
| Alma mater | St Joseph's Institution |
| Known for | Singapore's richest man Philanthropist; fugitive in the banking scandal of the National Bank of Brunei |
| Spouses |
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| Children | 11 daughters and 4 sons, including Eric Khoo (filmmaker) |
Tan Sri Khoo Teck Puat (Chinese: 邱德拔; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Khu Tek-poa̍t; pinyin: Qiū Débá; 13 January 1917 – 21 February 2004) was a banker and hotel owner, who, with an estimated fortune of S$4.3 billion (US$3,195,953,500), was the wealthiest man in Singapore at one point. He owned the Goodwood Group of boutique hotels in London and Singapore and was the largest single shareholder of the British bank Standard Chartered. The bulk of his fortune came from shares in Standard Chartered, which he bought in the 1980s to help thwart Lloyds Bank's proposed acquisition, deemed hostile by many financiers. The Goodwood Park Hotel in Singapore, built in 1900, is a restored historic landmark.
Around the period of his death in 2004, Khoo was ranked as the 108th richest person in the world by the business magazine Forbes. Khoo's estate has donated S$80 million to Duke–NUS Medical School.