![]() On 3 January 1994, the Hong Leong Group Malaysia acquired MUI Bank Berhad through Hong Leong Credit Berhad and renamed it as Hong Leong Bank Berhad (HLBB). Under the MUI banner the bank grew from 11 branches (including Singapore) to 35 branches. Subsequently it was renamed MUI Bank Bhd. Kwong Lee Bank Berhad was renamed Malayan United Bank Berhad on 2 February 1983. Exiting shareholders include OCBC Bank (which acquired a stake in the bank in 1964) and members of the Lam family (relatives and descendants of the founder Lam Ji Chiew). ![]() In May 1982, Kwong Lee Bank Berhad was acquired by the MUI Group, a corporate group controlled by Malaysian business tycoon Tan Sri Dato Khoo Kay Peng. Over the next four years, a total of six branches were opened in Labis, Segamat, Bintulu, Kota Tinggi, Kota Kinabalu and Kluang and on 1 January 1982, the Head Office was relocated from Kuching to Kuala Lumpur. From five banking branch offices in Sarawak ( Kuching, Sibu, Sarikei, Serian and Bintangor) and one in Singapore, the bank expanded its operations to Peninsular Malaysia when it opened its first branch in Kuala Lumpur in May 1978 and this was followed by another branch in Johor Bahru during the same month. The period subsequent to this saw a change in the direction of Kwong Lee Bank's expansion. In late 1977, Yang Amat Mulia Tunku Osman Ibni Tunku Temenggong Ahmad, a member of the royal family from the State of Johor, came in as a shareholder of the bank and acquired 30% of its share capital from both OCBC Bank and the Lam family. In 1973, Kwong Lee Bank opened another branch in Bintangor. The aftermath of the war saw the continued expansion of the Bank, and in 1964, Oversea-Chinese Banking Corporation of Singapore (OCBC Bank) under the stewardship of Tan Chin Tuan (its then Chairman and Managing Director) acquired a 52% majority stake in Kwong Lee Bank from the Lam family. In this connection, Kwong Lee Bank played an important role to revive confidence and business activities by providing financing to enable old businesses to be resumed and new ones to be set up. ![]() After the war the immediate task was one of reconstruction and rehabilitation. The Second World War caused a temporary disruption in the currency and banking system. Immediately after the Depression, on 26 October 1934, the company was converted into a public company under the name Kwong Lee Bank and shortly after, the third branch of the Bank was opened in Sarikei in 1937. Kwong Lee Mortgage and Remittance Company survived all these setbacks because of its strong cash reserves and its conservative operational policy. The Depression caused a sharp fall in the export earnings of commodities and many business concerns, including some banks, were in financial difficulties. The year 1929 saw the start of the Great Depression that lasted until 1933. After the recession, the company opened its branch in Sibu in 1923 and three years later another branch was opened in Singapore in 1926. A few years after hostilities ended, the post-war Recession of 1920-1921 set in. The First World War broke out in 1914 causing panic in the financial circles. In the initial years, the company went through a difficult period of growth when a number of economic crises occurred. It also provided the services of remitting money of overseas Chinese to their families in Southeast region of China. The company granted loans against the security of export commodities such as pepper, rubber and other indigenous products. Under her leadership, HLIB saw its market capitalisation grow tenfold in just five years.īesides being a reputable figure in the investment banking industry, Lee is also known for her impeccable sense of style, owing to her love of fashion.Hong Leong Bank was founded by Liaw Yu Rui and began its operations in 1905 in Kuching, Sarawak under the name of Kwong Lee Mortgage & Remittance Company. In 2009, Lee was tapped to help establish HLIB, and later that year was appointed managing director and CEO. She eventually pivoted to investment banking and since then has forged a successful career in a male-dominated industry, serving at Schroders, the investment banking division at UOB, and Hwang-DBS Investment Bank, which she helped to fully develop into an investment bank. She has helped spearhead a number of banks’ investment banking divisions, including Hong Leong, as well as being responsible for the overall development of its investment business.Īfter obtaining a degree followed by a Master’s in Business Administration in Canada, Lee began her banking career-which has flourished for more than 20 years-in commercial banking in her hometown Penang. Lee Jim Leng is the group managing director and CEO of Hong Leong Investment Bank (HLIB), and is known for her extensive experience in investment banking.
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