I joined Genting after KS had already left
the company. He was fondly missed by many of his former colleagues there. There
were many anecdotes about his generosity and kindness. Before I knew him, I had
always wished I could have the chance to work with him. He was a
larger-than-life corporate genius to me.
There was no way bosses in High & Low would pick up these two companies, I had to tell him. He was a gentleman. Over the telephone, he said, “Yu Bok, it is alright.”
Through a broker, we came to know that a 5,500-acre palm oil estate in Paloh, Johor was for sale. “Whose estate is that?”
Towards the late 70s, the Chinese community
was rediscovering itself. Multi-Purpose became the rallying point of the
Chinese. The name KS was synonymous with Multi-Purpose and Multi-Purpose was in
the headlines every other day.
I attended one of his luncheon talks one
day. He was a very confident speaker but certainly not a particularly eloquent
one. His command of English was average. The circumstances leading to some of
the prized acquisitions, he admitted himself, were more situational than
anything else.
However my admiration for him continued
unabated until sometime in 1983, when I had the opportunity to know him in
person. Things were already not going quite right for him in Supreme, the group
he controlled. High & Low was invited to take a look into two of its
subsidiaries – Supreme Refinery and Supreme Chemical. Their balance sheets were
atrocious. You really had to pay one to take the companies over; they had net
liabilities! Nevertheless, we were more interested in their businesses than
their assets.
The state of affairs at Supreme Chemical
was pathetic. We thought we should not waste anybody’s time.
Supreme Refinery was more presentable. The
plant manager, a pleasant-looking lady, in her thirties, received me. “Why were
the losses so huge?”
The answer was in the management accounts!
There were obviously some margins to be had
in the business, but the company had lost millions in doing hedging. Did the
big boss know about it?
* * * * *
I could not help relating this observation
to friends: The staircases or the bridges in refineries were usually the
see-through type. And ladies beware! If you have to visit one, make sure you
wear pants. On this particular day, the pretty plant manager was wearing a
not-too-long skirt. Could you really blame her colleagues for exercising their
neck each time we made a climb?
When I discussed the two companies with the
Yang Berhormat, the honorific to which he was entitled then, he said he did not
seem to have good fengshui apart from
Finance and Properties. In my audacity, I wrote him a small note: Yang
Berhormat, you have to go beyond good looks in management.
There was no way bosses in High & Low would pick up these two companies, I had to tell him. He was a gentleman. Over the telephone, he said, “Yu Bok, it is alright.”
* * * * *
Through a broker, we came to know that a 5,500-acre palm oil estate in Paloh, Johor was for sale. “Whose estate is that?”
The answer: “Supreme’s”
That was in 1984.
Not a bad estate, our plantation controller
Lee King Wat concluded. Since High & Low was also anxious to pick something
to show shareholders, the deal was soon closed. The consideration: RM46
million - everything therein and thereon, including the palm oil mill in the
middle of the estate.
The assets had to be checked against the
records.
“How come some 2-3 million dollars worth of
equipment was not in the books?”
“They were acquired under leased financing
from XXX”
A legal point arose. The assets acquired
under lease financing were strictly not Supreme’s. Under the circumstances,
could High & Low demand Supreme to surrender them? Or should High & Low
redeem them from the leasing company?
KS called me from the Subang
Airport ; he said he was on his way to Europe . “Could we come to a compromise?”
“Very difficult, Yang Berhormat. The High
& Low board have already made the decision. And you have agreed on therein and thereon basis, haven’t
you?”
“Alright, let’s conclude it early.”
He gave up so easily! I could not believe
it.
If the Yang Berhormat had kept a Mercedes
500 there and we had also insisted that it should be High & Low’s, possibly
YB Tan might also say, “Okay, it is all yours.” After all, we were talking
about therein and thereon and YB was a
man of principle.
* * * * *
The physical take-over was a three-day
affair. Personnel Department had to issue letters of continued employment to
those who wanted to stay behind; the Accounts and Audit people had to take
stock of the assets; and Plantations had to comb through the statistics. I, as
the corporate planner, had only to follow up with the legalities. But everyone
had a good outing in the midst of the jungles of Johor, where cobras sunbathe
themselves right in the middle of the estate roads.
“How come there are seven mini-tractors
when the book says there are four?”
It is a fact!
* * * * *
Chinese are worshippers of heroes. KS was
certainly a hero to many.
He has a very pleasant personality. He can
make his guests, no matter how ordinary they are, feel at ease. A great student
of management, he knows all the SWOT*1 stuff
at his fingertips.
Tan Sri Lim told me this one morning over
tea at Genting. KS was first introduced to him when Tan Sri was having some
difficulty with his tax returns. He had certainly contributed a great deal to
the growth of Genting. Essentially a doer, KS was able to help convert Tan
Sri’s dreams into realities. But with or without KS, Genting would always be a
formidable name under Tan Sri Lim Goh Tong.
The exposure KS had in Harvard must have
been a watershed in his career. Famous for its case study method of imparting
entrepreneurship into bright-eyed mavericks, HBS, among other things, teaches
the use of high-sounding jargons and the art of “getting things done”.
KS saw business as a big jigsaw puzzle –
you must have all the pieces to form a picture. He had had big visions for the
Chinese community. But what happened to Multi-Purpose?
Also what about Matang, Aik Hua and P’ng
Hua?
He was billed as the financial wizard of
the time. But having interacted with him before, I came off very unsure of the
depth of his wizardry.
* * * * *
“R” and “L” are used interchangeably by
some Chinese in pronouncing English. “Wizard” and “lizard” also sound quite
alike. Maybe it was “lizard” they had in mind when they said “wizard”. Was the
recent Singapore Airlines disaster in Taipei ’s
Chiang Kai-shek airport a result of this interchangeablity – R- or L-runway?
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