From Haidilao tycoon to Jack Ma's wife: Billionaires who bought 8-figure Singapore properties
Zhu Su, co-founder of disgraced crypto fund Three Arrows Capital, bought the S$48.8 million GCB at Yarwood Avenue in March 2022. PHOTO: ST FILE
From Haidilao tycoon to Jack Ma's wife: Billionaires who bought 8-figure Singapore properties
SINGAPORE - Singapore's top-end real estate has been a must-have for billionaires and multi-millionaires seeking a safe haven amid a tanking US dollar and dark clouds over global markets.
Demand is likely to persist as more ultra-rich and family offices locate here, in line with the Republic's push to be a wealth hub. Realstar Premier's managing director Julian Yip said more buyers are also emerging from the crypto sector, likely driven by the industry's recent performance.
When money is no object, Singapore's Good Class Bungalows (GCBs) – of which there are only about 2,700 – seem to be the most coveted.
Steve Tay, executive director of Steve Tay Real Estate, said that buyers see this rarefied segment as a long-term wealth preservation hedge against short-term volatility.
Here are some notable Singapore property purchases snapped up by the super-rich in recent years:
Public Bank founder's daughter breaks a record deal for Tanglin GCB (2025)
Diona Teh, daughter of the late Public Bank founder Teh Hong Piow signed a $93.9 million deal for a Tanglin Hill GCB in 2025.
The new GCB spans 2,756 square metres, with two storeys, and has a 25 m pool with a tanning deck, walk-in wine chiller and an 18-seater theatre.
Koufu founder's sons snaps up Caldecott Hill GCB (2025)
In May 2025, food and beverage company Koufu Group husband-and-wife founders Pang Lim and Ng Hoon Tien's two sons were in a deal to buy a Caldecott Hill GCB site for $58 million.
The GCB has a freehold land area of 39,276 sq ft containing two bungalows separated by a low wall.
One bungalow has two storeys and a garden, with the other has two storeys, an attic an a swimming pool.
The property was formerly owned and bought in the 1960s by Chan Kok Kwan, a famous diamond merchant and has housed three generations of his family.
Wilmar chairman's nephew snags Astrid Hill GCB (2024)
In 2024, Glenn Kuok, a nephew of Wilmar International chairman and CEO Kuok Khoon Hong, bought a $49 million bungalow in Astrid Hill with his mother, Lee Yong Lah.
Jack Ma's wife buys 3 shophouses in Tanjong Pagar (2024)
Three adjoining shophouses in Tanjong Pagar were bought by Zhang Ying, wife of Alibaba Group co-founder Jack Ma.
Ms Zhang, a Singaporean, paid $45 million to $50 million for 70, 71 and 72 Duxton Road.
The three properties stand on commercial-zoned sites and have 99-year leasehold tenures starting from September 1988, with a balance of around 63.5 years. They each have three floors and an attic, with a combined plot of 3,239 sq ft.
Ms Zhang is believed to have also bought a GCB in the Astrid Park area via a trust for more than $80 million in 2023.
Wife of Sea's Forrest Li bags couple's second bungalow (2024)
Ma Liqian, wife of Forrest Li, who owns New York-listed Sea, was in 2024 said to be buying an old GCB next to one that her tech billionaire husband acquired years earlier and nearly finished redeveloping.
Ms Ma's purchase of the $42.5 million bungalow is the couple's second GCB on Gallop Road near the Singapore Botanic Gardens. Both properties are part of the Gallop Road/Woollerton Park GCB Area.
The property was sold by the children of the late kidney doctor Gordon Ku, who founded the Kidney Dialysis Foundation. The couple are Singapore citizens, though Mr Li hails from Tianjin.
Wee family scion scoops up multi-million dollar mansion from ex-Keppel CEO (2024)
Grant Wee (formerly known as Grace Wee), the grandchild of the late UOB patriarch and banking veteran Wee Cho Yaw, was said to be buying a $39.5 million GCB in Ford Avenue, off Holland Road, in 2024.
Grant Wee is the youngest child of UOB chief executive Wee Ee Cheong, the late Mr Wee's eldest son.
The co-owner of the 19,500 sq ft mansion being sold was Choo Chiau Beng, the former CEO of the company now called Keppel and Singapore's non-resident envoy to Brazil.
Subsequently in 2024, Wee Boo Tee, a nephew of the late Wee Cho Yaw bought a $23 million old two-story bungalow with a land area of 15,121 sq ft.
First Resources family buys four Nassim Road bungalows (2023)
The family behind Singapore-listed palm oil group First Resources scooped up four Nassim Road bungalows in the span of a few months in 2023.
Singaporean members of the Indonesian Fangiono family bought a trio of GCBs from Cuscaden Peak Investments for $206.7 million. Cuscaden Peak Investments was formerly known as Singapore Press Holdings before its May 2022 privatisation.
Separately, another Singaporean member of the family bought a fourth bungalow on the same street from a low-profile property investor, at $88 million. The combined cost of all four properties neared $295 million.
Haidilao tycoon buys Cluny Hill GCB (2022)
Sean Shi, a co-founder of Haidilao International, China's largest hotpot chain, bought a Cluny Hill GCB from the late Dr Lee Wei Ling – the daughter of founding prime minister Lee Kuan Yew and sister of Senior Minister and former prime minister Lee Hsien Loong – in 2022.
Mr Shi paid $50 million for the freehold property.
The price worked out to $2,740 per square foot (psf) on the 18,255 sq ft land area. At the time, this was less than that for similar properties in the area, as market watchers said property in the Cluny Hill GCB area could fetch around $3,000 to $4,000 ps f.
The property is located in the vicinity of Haidilao chairman and co-founder Zhang Yong's Gallop Road GCB. Both properties are within walking distance of the Singapore Botanic Gardens.
Failed crypto fund co-founder Zhu Su bags Yarwood GCB (2022)
The co-founder of disgraced crypto fund Three Arrows Capital (3AC), Zhu Su, bought a $48.8 million GCB at Yarwood Avenue in March 2022.
The bungalow was used as an urban farm managed by a company co-founded by Zhu's wife Evelyn Tao, who conducted guided tours and private dining sessions at the site from early 2023.
In 2020, Ms Tao purchased a GCB at Dalvey Road, near the Singapore Botanic Gardens, for $28.5 million. She sold it for $51 million in 2024, despite a court-imposed freeze on some of the couple's assets.
Kelly Chen, the wife of 3AC co-founder Kyle Davies, bought a bungalow in Ridout Park area in 2021 which was last reported to be in the process of being sold for $37 million.
Nanofilm founder's wife buys GCB from Sinar Mas co-founder (2021)
Jin Xiao Qun, the wife of Singapore-listed Nanofilm Technologies International's founder Shi Xu, purchased a Nassim Road GCB for $128.8 million.
The seller in the deal was Sukmawati Widjaja, a member of the Widjaja family who co-founded the family-controlled Sinar Mas Group with her late father Eka Tjipta Widjaja.
E-commerce platform Stamped.io founder picks up GCB (2021)
The founder of Singapore-based e-commerce marketing platform Stamped.io, Tommy Ong, reportedly splashed $63.7 million on a GCB at 2 Cluny Hill in 2021.
Mr Ong's purchase of the property at $4,291 psf for 14,844 sq ft of land area marked a landmark deal for 2021 – a year that recorded two GCB sales at more than $4,000 psf.
It surpassed a previous record GCB psf price set by Jin when she bought the Nassim Road GCB.
Hedge fund founder picks up Chinatown shophouses at S$25m (2021)
Ray Dalio, founder of prominent hedge fund firm Bridgewater Associates, snapped up two shophouses along Club Street in the historic Chinatown area in 2021.
The Dalio Family Office paid $25.5 million for 44 and 46 Club Street.
Mr Dalio announced the opening of a Singapore family office in 2020 to run his investments and philanthropy in the region.
Taiwanese family behind Want Want buys Orchard condo tower (2021)
All 20 units at a freehold luxury condominium development in the Orchard area were snapped up by the Tsai family of Want Want cracker fame.
Two members of the Taiwanese family behind snack food giant Want Want China Holdings paid $293 million for the entire Eden Tower of the development at 2 Draycott Park.
Secretlab CEO bags GCB and penthouse (2021)
Gaming chair company Secretlab co-founder Ian Ang bought two luxury properties for $51 million in the span of just one week.
In 2021, the Secretlab CEO reportedly acquired a $36 million GCB at 27 Olive Road in the Caldecott Hill Estate. That same week, he bought a $15 million triplex penthouse at Leedon Residence near the Singapore Botanic Gardens. THE BUSINESS TIMES
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He sought investors who were willing to commit for years, and focused on businesses he could hold for a decade or more. 'Compounding is everything,' he says. 'All good things happen because of compounding, whether it's wealth, health, family or relationships.' The approach was unusual in the world of public markets, where most investors chase quick returns. Asked how a 27-year-old resisted the allure of fast money, he says: 'There's a lot of noise and turbulence when you're flying at a certain level but if you fly slightly higher, it's actually calmer. And you can see the horizon better.' Mr Shiv Puri with the late Mr Charles Munger, vice-chairman of American multinational conglomerate Berkshire Hathaway, in 2019. PHOTO: COURTESY OF SHIV PURI Word spread. Institutional investors – family offices, college endowments, even a sovereign wealth fund – came knocking. Today, the company manages more than 150 times its original capital, with a team split between Singapore and India. TVF's approach is resolutely bottom-up, focused on sectors like financial services, healthcare (especially hospitals), technology and consumer discretionary, particularly in India and South-east Asia. Key investments which the company has held for more than a decade include Max Healthcare, a major player in India's healthcare sector; Info Edge, an early-stage tech company that grew into a big online classifieds business; and Bajaj Finance, a non-banking financial company with a market capitalisation that has gone from US$3 billion in 2015 to US$65 billion (S$83 billion) today. 'We look for businesses that can scale, maintain quality and have a long runway for growth,' he says. 'Patience is active, very active endurance, knowing that there's a goal, knowing that you're making progress but it's not immediate,' he says sagely. He insists on getting to know founders deeply, sometimes over decades, before investing. 'It's not just about the person at the top, but the culture within the firm,' he says. If golf taught him patience, and the crash taught him risk, it was the Mumbai terror attacks of 2008 that taught him perspective. On the night of Nov 26 that year, Mr Puri, his wife and two friends were having pre-dinner aperitifs at the Taj Mahal Palace hotel's Harbour Bar when gunfire erupted. 'At first, we thought someone had dropped a lot of plates,' he recalls. But the reality soon became clear. Drawing on his knowledge of the hotel's layout – he got married there a year earlier – he led his group through kitchens and corridors, seeking refuge. They hid in the chef's office, lights off, chairs braced against the door, as terrorists stalked the hallways. At one point, he heard a terrorist outside the door asking a hotel employee if there were guests inside. 'At that point, the terrorists were not shooting the servers, waiters or chefs unless they came in the line of fire. They wanted to shoot the guests, the foreigners, people who would make headlines. Luckily, the employee said there was no one inside.' Later, a heroic chef – who unfortunately died in the course of the night – led them to a business lounge packed with 150 people. When an evacuation was attempted, the first 30 people in line were gunned down. Mr Puri and his wife and friends were just four places behind. 'It was pure luck,' he says quietly. They spent the night lying flat on the floor, frozen as gunfire echoed around them, until commandos finally rescued them at dawn. 'I always had an innate belief that it was going to be okay,' he says. His wife, meanwhile, could think only of their five-week-old baby at home. After the incident, she struggled to leave the house for months, but Mr Puri went back to work two days later. The experience was transformative. 'After that, nothing in business, no market crisis, could come close. It put everything in perspective.' His brush with death was a turning point, he says. 'I became much more deliberate about purpose. Wealth creation has to have a purpose. For me, that's making an impact, especially in education and healthcare,' says Mr Puri, who also set up his own family office, Vesta Global Capital, in 2015. Over time, he channelled his energies into philanthropy, especially in education. 'Education can really change lives. It's the best form of pay-it-forward,' says Mr Puri, who, among other things, helped scale Prayas, a non-governmental organisation that runs after-school programmes for disadvantaged children in Delhi, and co-founded Ashoka University, now India's largest liberal arts institution. His involvement goes beyond funding. He is actively building bridges between Ashoka and the National University of Singapore (NUS), fostering student exchanges and entrepreneurial internships. In Singapore, where he moved to after the Mumbai attacks, he also sits on the international advisory council of the NUS Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, mentoring young doctors and entrepreneurs. Mr Shiv Puri planting a tree in 2016 at Ashoka University, which he co-founded. PHOTO: COURTESY OF SHIV PURI Healthcare, particularly eldercare, is his next frontier. 'How do you age gracefully? It's about finding purpose, getting respect and still feeling like you're a valuable member of society even though you're not working. It's a combination of all these things,' he says. For insights into long-term thinking, he studies Mr Buffett's annual letters. For perspective, he turns to Roman emperor Marcus Aurelius' Meditations, a collection of writings on Stoic philosophy. Among other things, Stoic philosophy focuses on staying grounded, resilient and at peace by focusing on what you can control and letting go of what you can't. Despite the constant drumbeat of bad news and global woes, the father of two teenagers prefers to remain optimistic. 'Civilisation requires trust. I think optimism is a default setting. It doesn't mean you're being naive. But I think people are far too pessimistic, especially in the investing world.' He adds: 'Human ingenuity cannot be underestimated. And despite all we have endured in the past, we are still living in the most prosperous time on earth.' Join ST's WhatsApp Channel and get the latest news and must-reads.