logo
CEO's wealth hits US$33 billion as unprofitable Chinese medicine firm's stock soars

CEO's wealth hits US$33 billion as unprofitable Chinese medicine firm's stock soars

Business Times18-06-2025
[NEW YORK] A blistering rally in a tiny, money-losing traditional Chinese medicine company's stock has vaulted its founder's net worth to among the world's largest fortunes.
The firm, Hong Kong-based Regencell Bioscience Holding, was for all intents and purposes trading as a microcap stock on the Nasdaq just eight weeks ago. But its shares have since exploded, gaining more than 82,000 per cent since its Feb 13 low. The move has boosted the value of chief executive officer Yat-Gai Au's 86 per cent stake to US$33.3 billion, according to the Bloomberg billionaires Index, making Au's paper wealth greater than rich-list stalwarts such as Phil Knight and Masayoshi Son.
The shares closed up 30 per cent to US$78 on Tuesday (Jun 17) in New York trading, after gaining 283 per cent on Monday following a 38-for-1 stock split.
Regencell is an improbable vehicle for creating a multibillion-dollar fortune. Largely self-funded by Au, the company sells herbal medicine treatments for ADHD and autism spectrum disorder. The firm is still in the R&D phase and has never turned a profit since going public, losing US$4.4 million in the fiscal year through Jun 30, 2024, according to filings. Its chief medical officer position has been vacant since the last doctor to hold the job resigned in 2022.
'Both entities [Regencell and its associated foundation] are Gai's passion projects, and he will continue to invest his personal funds to defend what he believes in,' according to Au's bio page on the company's website. 'He has literally put his money where his mouth is by investing over USUS$9 million in RGC to demonstrate his personal belief and commitment.'
Regencell did not respond to a request for comment.
BT in your inbox
Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox.
Sign Up
Sign Up
Family business
Founded in 2014, Regencell's main line of business is marketing and licensing traditional treatments developed by the founder's father, Sik-Kee Au. The elder Au has a background in electrical engineering and formerly owned a security alarm business in California. In August 2021, he was found guilty of professional misconduct by a practitioners' board in Hong Kong for overprescribing medicine, according to a public order.
Regencell has exclusive rights over traditional medicinal formulas developed by Sik-Kee Au trademarked under the name Brain Theory. They consist of liquid-based herbal compounds taken twice daily, aimed at treating neurocognitive disorders.
The younger Au started Regencell after he was diagnosed with ADHD as a child and suffered from dyslexia through much of his schooling. Despite those learning difficulties, he attended the Haas School of Business at the University of California-Berkeley and landed a job at Deutsche Bank in the late 1990s, working on more than US$4 billion in deals before founding Regencell.
His older brother Yat-Pang is the founder and CEO of Veritas Investments, a property investment company that manages roughly 250 buildings on the US West Coast. In 2019, Bloomberg valued his wealth at more than US$100 million.
As a high schooler growing up in Silicon Valley, Yat-Pang made headlines as a symbol of alleged anti-Asian discrimination in college admissions when he was rejected from UC Berkeley despite an excellent academic record, according to a 1987 Los Angeles Times report. He later went on earn an MBA from Harvard Business School in 2000.
Boosting stake
Yat-Gai Au has spent more than US$12 million buying Regencell shares since it went public in 2021. The company's next-largest backer is Samuel Chen, an investor whose early investments in Zoom Video Communications made him a fortune when the company's stock soared almost 1,500 per cent during the pandemic. Chen owned a stake in Regencell worth more than US$2.9 billion at Tuesday's closing price.
Beyond investing in neurological treatments, Regencell has dabbled in other areas, too. In 2021, the company signed a two-year licensing agreement to distribute traditional Chinese medicine treatments for Covid-19 in Asia.
It's unclear what prompted Monday's massive stock move, which wasn't preceded by any company news and came immediately after the forward stock split. Regencell's shares are very thinly traded: Only about 6 per cent of its outstanding shares float, which makes the stock price more susceptible to extreme fluctuations. BLOOMBERG
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Microsoft curbs early access for Chinese firms to notifications about cybersecurity flaws
Microsoft curbs early access for Chinese firms to notifications about cybersecurity flaws

Business Times

time18 minutes ago

  • Business Times

Microsoft curbs early access for Chinese firms to notifications about cybersecurity flaws

[EDINBURGH] Microsoft has curtailed Chinese companies' access to advance notifications about cybersecurity vulnerabilities in its technology after investigating whether a leak led to a series of hacks exploiting flaws in its SharePoint software. The change, which occurred last month, will limit access for programme participants in 'countries where they're required to report vulnerabilities to their governments', which would include China, according to David Cuddy, a Microsoft spokesperson. The goal of the Microsoft Active Protections Program, or MAPP, is to provide security software companies around the world with early details about flaws in Microsoft products so they can provide updated protections for their customers faster. The announcement from Microsoft follows a campaign of cyberattacks that Microsoft blamed on state-sponsored hackers in China who targeted security weaknesses in SharePoint servers. More than 400 government agencies and corporations were breached in the SharePoint attacks, including the US's National Nuclear Security Administration, responsible for designing and maintaining the country's nuclear weapons. It's unclear how alleged Chinese hackers discovered the vulnerabilities in SharePoint. Following the attacks, however, Microsoft investigated whether details about the flaws may have leaked from its MAPP partners, Bloomberg News previously reported. Now, Microsoft will no longer provide MAPP participants affected by the change with 'proof of concept' code demonstrating flaws. Instead, it will issue them 'a more general written description' of the vulnerabilities, which it would send at the same time as patches to fix the weaknesses are released, the company spokesperson said. 'We are aware of the potential for this to be abused, which is why we take steps, both known and confidential, to prevent misuse,' said Cuddy. 'We continuously review participants and suspend or remove them if we find they violated their contract with us, which includes a prohibition on participating in offensive attacks.' BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up Cuddy did not comment on the findings of Microsoft's investigation into a potential leak related to the SharePoint hacks but said there were 'multiple working theories on the cause'. A spokesperson for the Chinese embassy in Washington DC said that they were not familiar with the details of Microsoft's changes or suspected leaks from the MAPP programme. But they added that cybersecurity was a 'common challenge' faced by all countries and should be addressed jointly through dialogue and cooperation. The MAPP group includes at least a dozen Chinese technology and cybersecurity companies, according to Microsoft. Those members would previously receive information about patches to security vulnerabilities at least 24 hours before Microsoft released them to the public. Concerns about Chinese participants are due in part to a 2021 law mandating that any company or security researcher who identifies a cybersecurity vulnerability must report it within 48 hours to China's Ministry of Industry and Information Technology. In addition, MAPP has been the source of alleged leaks as far back as 2012, when Microsoft accused Hangzhou DPtech Technologies, a Chinese network security company, of breaching a non-disclosure agreement, disclosing information that exposed a major vulnerability in Windows. More recently, in 2021, Microsoft suspected at least two other Chinese MAPP partners of leaking information about vulnerabilities in its Exchange servers, leading to a global hacking campaign that Microsoft blamed on a Chinese espionage group called Hafnium. Dakota Cary, a China-focused consultant at the US cybersecurity company SentinelOne, said Microsoft's decision to curtail Chinese companies' access to information on cybersecurity vulnerabilities was a 'fantastic change.' 'It is very clear that the Chinese companies in MAPP have to respond to incentives from the government,' Cary said. 'So it makes sense to limit the information provided.' Eugenio Benincasa, a researcher who specialises in analysing Chinese cyberattacks at ETH Zurich's Center for Security Studies, said there had been suspicions about leaks out of the MAPP programme for years, but said that 'unprecedented attention on China's cyber operations right now' meant Microsoft likely felt pressure to take action. Microsoft also confirmed for the first time that it had shut down 'transparency centres' it had previously set up in China, where the government could review the source code of the company's technology to confirm it was free of hidden 'backdoors' that can be used for digital surveillance. Cuddy said such facilities in China had 'long been retired' and that 'no one has visited one in China since 2019'. The tech giant had permitted access to its source code in China since at least 2003, when the company announced it was 'the first commercial software company that provides the Chinese government with access to its source code' and done so to provide authorities with confidence in the security of the Windows platform. Microsoft's recent disclosures came in response to questions from Bloomberg News concerning allegations in a new report that Chinese organisations tied to cyber-espionage were working at the same sprawling campus in Wuhan with members of the MAPP programme. The organisations were operating out of the National Cybersecurity Center, which specialises in defensive and offensive hacking technologies and houses a division of China's Ministry of State Security, according to a report prepared by the Tech Integrity Project, a US advocacy group. Cuddy, the Microsoft spokesperson, said that Microsoft had never engaged with the cybersecurity centre in Wuhan. The spokesperson for the Chinese embassy in Washington said that they were not familiar with the specific details of the report, but added that China 'opposes and fights hacking activities in accordance with the law'. 'At the same time, we oppose smears and attacks against China under the excuse of cybersecurity issues,' the spokesperson said. BLOOMBERG

Chinese carriers claim jets from elusive Airbus mega-order
Chinese carriers claim jets from elusive Airbus mega-order

Business Times

timean hour ago

  • Business Times

Chinese carriers claim jets from elusive Airbus mega-order

[HONG KONG] China's biggest airlines have started dividing up a 500-plane mega-order for Airbus jets from a deal that Beijing is still looking for an opportune time to announce, months after it came together, sources familiar with the matter said. China Southern Airlines, Air China and China Eastern Airlines each plan to claim about 100 aircraft, said the sources, who asked not to be identified discussing details that are private. Smaller carriers Xiamen Air and Sichuan Airlines Group are targeting agreements closer to 35, one of the sources said. The order, reported on by Bloomberg News in June, would be among the largest ever for Chinese airlines, which typically order in bulk through the government. It was originally expected to be announced in early July during the China–European Union 50th anniversary meeting in Beijing. However, with grievances over trade and the war in Ukraine casting a shadow over those talks, no transaction was announced, the sources said. While China and the EU wait for another appropriate occasion, individual Chinese airlines have been in discussions with local procurement authorities to settle their purchase requests and then negotiate with Airbus directly on plane numbers, the sources said. Airbus declined to comment. Representatives for China Southern, Air China, China Eastern and Xiamen Air did not respond to requests for comment. Sichuan Airlines could not be reached. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up Chinese airlines are keen to secure access to plane deliveries before the end of the decade, considering the supply backlog at both Airbus and Boeing. Airbus had told its Chinese customers they risked relinquishing the prized slots if they did not sign up soon, one of the sources said. The European planemaker has largely sold out of production slots for its most popular single-aisle jet and widebody products through the end of this decade. With the second-largest air travel market in the world and plenty of unrealised growth, China needs planes to replace older jets and fuel both domestic and international expansion. The magnitude of the mooted deal also shows China's continued reliance on US and Western industrial technology, despite developing the Commercial Aircraft Corporation of China, or Comac, as a homegrown champion. Comac's marquee C919 jet still faces a slow ramp-up. Although it has won an order for 300 planes from the country's top three airlines, China Southern, Air China and China Eastern, it's delivered just 21 of them since December 2022. The Airbus deal's finalisation would give the European planemaker an edge this year on net planes ordered as politics and trade dominate commercial agreements. Boeing leads Airbus with 739 orders so far in 2025 versus its 501, aided by large deals influenced by US President Donald Trump. Airbus has, however, increased its share of sales to China, helped by a final assembly line in Tianjin for its popular A320 family aircraft. The facility is undergoing an expansion that will ultimately see it double in size. Airbus has also historically benefited from Boeing's 737 Max grounding that prevented deliveries into China for years. Chinese carriers have not announced a major order for US-made planes since at least 2017. BLOOMBERG

Africa presents a promising new frontier for Singapore businesses
Africa presents a promising new frontier for Singapore businesses

Business Times

timean hour ago

  • Business Times

Africa presents a promising new frontier for Singapore businesses

AS TRADE tensions and supply-chain disruptions reshape the business landscape, Singapore companies must look beyond traditional markets for sustainable growth. Africa's growth trajectory presents a compelling story. During my visits to Africa, I was struck by the continent's remarkable potential for growth, driven by its natural resources, demographic advantages, expansive consumer base and the innate creativity of its people. For instance, Kenya – which I visited in March – has become East Africa's technology powerhouse. There, innovations in mobile money are changing how millions manage their daily transactions. This dynamism is not unique to Kenya. While Africa is not homogeneous, similar stories of development and opportunity are unfolding in other parts of the continent. By 2050, Africa's population is expected to reach 2.5 billion, with African youth making up a third of the global youth population. The continent's economy is projected to grow by 3.6 per cent this year, above the global average of 2.4 per cent. This momentum is reflected in Singapore's bilateral trade with the continent, which grew from US$9.1 billion in 2020 to US$13.7 billion in 2024. A NEWSLETTER FOR YOU Friday, 8.30 am SGSME Get updates on Singapore's SME community, along with profiles, news and tips. Sign Up Sign Up Overcoming hesitance Yet, despite Africa's potential, many Singapore companies remain hesitant, often deterred by distance, perceived risks and unfamiliarity. Overcoming these barriers requires companies to make a fundamental shift in their mindset and approach to new markets beyond our traditional neighbourhood. My work in helping companies internationalise, under Enterprise Singapore, has shown me how businesses can enjoy early-mover advantages and build scale when they take the road less travelled. Kitchen-appliance supplier Newmatic, for instance, faced a highly competitive market in Singapore. In 2015, it had the opportunity to partner with a distributor to enter Kenya. Since then, it has opened 14 showrooms across Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Angola and Nigeria. Doing business in Africa comes with challenges, from currency volatility to regulatory complexities. But companies would face similar challenges when entering any market – and can overcome them by investing time to understand local market nuances, conducting thorough due diligence and developing targeted strategies for mitigation. Where the opportunities lie For companies ready to venture into Africa, the growing focus on sustainability is creating new opportunities. One major area is the emerging carbon economy, within which Africa's vast natural resources position it as a key player. Singapore sees Africa as an important partner here, and has signed implementation agreements with Ghana and Rwanda. Besides carbon trading, there are opportunities in project development, consulting and carbon services. This potential attracted 22 Singapore-based companies to join an inaugural carbon-credits business mission to Ghana in July 2024. Among them was HydraX, which specialises in capital markets infrastructure. Its software enables countries to develop registries, exchanges or distribution platforms for carbon credits trading under Article 6 of the Paris Agreement. Beyond sustainability, Africa's digital transformation is unlocking opportunities across sectors. The continent's young, mobile-first population drives demand for innovative digital solutions. Riding this wave is Singapore-based fintech Thunes. Its cross-border payment network enables transfers to over three billion mobile wallets globally, connecting users across Africa and the rest of the world. Its partnerships with leading mobile money platforms in Africa have enhanced financial access, enabling real-time payments across the continent. As cities across Africa expand, there is growing demand for integrated urban planning, infrastructure development and smart-city solutions. This creates natural synergies with Singapore's expertise in sustainable urban planning and solutions. Surbana Jurong has been supporting Africa's development through its master planning, urban-design and complex engineering capabilities. SMEC, part of the group, has played an integral role in delivering major infrastructure projects across the continent, including the Nairobi expressway project in Kenya and the Msikaba bridge in South Africa. Opportunities are also being created by Africa's manufacturing drive. Amid global supply chain shifts, the continent presents a potential manufacturing base for companies seeking resilience. Many African nations are also prioritising local production to meet rising consumer demand and reduce import dependence. All this creates opportunities for Singapore companies across the manufacturing, logistics and energy sectors. Singapore-headquartered conglomerate Tolaram, for example, began manufacturing Indomie instant noodles in Nigeria and Ghana through a joint venture with Indofood. Recognising the continent's manufacturing potential, Tolaram then partnered with Kellanova to produce Kellogg's cereals and instant noodles for Africa and the Middle East. Today, it has grown into one of Africa's largest manufacturers of fast-moving consumer goods. Another example is Singapore-based agribusiness company Valency International, which recently established a US$40 million cashew processing plant in Cote d'Ivoire. The plant will process 45,000 tonnes of cashews annually and create over 2,000 local jobs. Gearing up for entry In today's business landscape, the question of engaging Africa has shifted from whether to do so, to how to do so. The continent is emerging as a strategic frontier market, driven by strong consumer demand while serving as a gateway for regional and global trade. Early movers who invest time to understand these markets will have distinct advantages. Companies can leverage Enterprise Singapore's Overseas Centres in Johannesburg, Nairobi, and Accra for on-ground support to navigate the intricacies of African markets. Through these networks, we facilitate partnerships and identify business opportunities. The upcoming Africa-Singapore Business Forum will further catalyse connections, bringing together businesses from both continents to explore new possibilities. As global economic dynamics shift, Africa represents not just an alternative market, but also a strategic imperative for Singapore companies' long-term growth. The opportunities are clear; the time to act is now. The writer is deputy managing director of markets at Enterprise Singapore

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store