Brother of Great Eagle chairman offloads residential assets amid Hong Kong market recovery


Lo Ying-sui, a younger brother of Great Eagle Holdings’ chairman Lo Ka-shui, has started selling residential units in a sign that some investors prefer to maintain liquidity amid an uncertain property market cycle.

Land Registry records showed a unit registered under Joy Eagle was sold to King Faith International for HK$19 million (US$2.4 million) on March 17.

A company search showed that Joy Eagle’s directors include Lo Ying-sui and his wife Lim Boon Tuang Lynda. Lo is also a non-executive director of Great Eagle.

With a Doctor of Medicine degree from the University of Chicago, Lo is a specialist in cardiology and an honorary clinical associate professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong Faculty of Medicine, according to the latest interim report of Great Eagle.

Angus Luk, senior director at property consultancy CBRE, said some investors preferred to maintain liquidity as property market cycles remained uncertain, while others were reshuffling their portfolios as prices stabilised and buyers returned to the market.

Lo Ka-shui, chairman of Great Eagle Holdings, attends the tribute for the late Lee Shau Kee at the Hong Kong Funeral Home in North Point, April 27, 2025. Photo: May Tse
Lo Ka-shui, chairman of Great Eagle Holdings, attends the tribute for the late Lee Shau Kee at the Hong Kong Funeral Home in North Point, April 27, 2025. Photo: May Tse

“Now that the market has improved, there are buyers willing to take over these properties,” Luk said. “If they had sold earlier, they might not have made a profit, but now they can.”

  • Related Posts

    India’s manufacturing growth hits three-month high in May as demand remains strong – Firstpost

    India’s manufacturing activity expanded at its fastest pace in three months in May, driven by strong domestic demand and rising new orders, even as higher fuel costs and West Asia-related…

    Continue reading
    SoftBank dethrones Toyota as Japan’s most valuable firm as AI frenzy reshapes markets – Firstpost

    SoftBank Group has overtaken Toyota Motor as Japan’s most valuable listed company after a sharp AI-driven rally, highlighting how investor enthusiasm for artificial intelligence and semiconductor stocks is reshaping global…

    Continue reading

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *