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How to become very rich in Malaysia - P. Gunasegaram (the star)

Tan KW
Publish date: Thu, 27 Jun 2013, 10:12 AM
Tan KW
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Good.

 

Connections and the ability to flip assets can get you going places

 

If you have ever wondered how to get rich in Malaysia – fabulously rich and very quickly at that – here’s a model that you might want to look at very closely. Not easy to do but if you do have a couple of projects in the bag, it will set you up for several lifetimes.

First you need connections – strong ones, the higher the better and if it goes right up to the top all the better. You need this because you need to convince the powers that be that your projects are good.

But you might ask if your projects are so good, why do you need connections? Why don’t you just go out and execute? Good questions, those. Here’s the answer - you need the state to give you something to do the deal that will help the nation.

Still can’t figure it out? See, it’s like this. You want to help the country, right? The country needs say a port. But you can’t build a port just like that. You need land to build a port. You tell the state or federal government you need land – cheap land, preferably free to build the port.

Or to take another example, you want to help the country by building a power plant. But look, you need land too and not only that you need the power to be sold. So you want an agreement – an iron-clad one to sell the power to Tenaga Nasional and to pass through all costs.

You see, that’s your reward as an entrepreneur – you get someone else to build the power plant, they guarantee the performance of the plant and someone else guarantees to buy your power and pay for all your costs. Nice deal? You bet. Billionaires have been made that way.

Or you may want to start an air hub. If you are persuasive enough, you can even convince the government to compulsorily acquire the land and sell it to you cheap. Once you have cheap land, lucrative contracts and concession agreements, the sky’s the limit.

Let’s take it a step further. If you want to realise the value of all of these things that you have and still keep control of them, it’s nice to have a listed company into which you can inject them. Inject one asset for shares and you gain control of the company.

And then inject others over the years for cash, taking the money out of the company. Who says you can’t have your cake and eat it too?

Do it right and get a flow of assets to inject in (you can do anything with discounted cash flow valuations – just change the discount rate, and presto, the value changes!), and you get a tidy flow of profits and cash into your personal accounts over the years. I mean a really tidy flow.

Just how much can you make this way, you ask? Why don’t you take a guess first? Did you say RM500mil? Guess again. RM1bil? How about five times that and you may be getting into the right order of magnitude.

One Tan Sri Syed Mokhtar Albukhary actually made some RM4.5bil that way - actually more because he still controls the listed company. (MMC’s latest RM1.7bil deal irks investors7) We are not saying he is the only one, which makes your chances of joining the ranks better – if you are connected to high places that is.

But then again, if things change – and that’s still a big ‘if’ – you might not find it so easy anymore.

 

P. Gunasegaram is managing editor of The Star. He thinks it is high time we changed the way we did business

 

 

http://biz.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2008/12/13/business/2795532

Discussions
Be the first to like this. Showing 4 of 4 comments

richman

plain daylight robbery of the peoples money and this government is encouraging this.disgusting

2013-06-27 10:22

wilsontai1020

only those ''connection'' ppl can do it easily...LOL
Malaysia Boleh..XD

2013-11-05 12:13

g00glefr3ak

The country now is running a virtual aristocracy, where hardworking people are not rewarded due to their lack of connections and political know how. Meanwhile, the cash pile is accumulating ever so quickly in the hands of the political dynasties and this is really bad for the future economy of Malaysia.

2014-10-04 01:42

andychucky28

Definately not in klse unless you are insiders

2014-10-04 07:45

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