After World War II, he started his own shipping company called Amasia Trading, which imported flour, onions, fruits, used clothing, old newspapers, and magazines from the United States into the Philippines.
San Miguel Corporation was a big customer of the company. It caused a price war and the closure of one corn starch company, which led to the dismissal of a young chemical engineer named
Lucio Tan. Tan later jested with Gokongwei that he costed Tan his employment. In 1961, he established Consolidated Food Corporation (later known as CFC Corporation, which later merged with Universal Robina Corporation), which launched its instant coffee brand Blend 45. In November 1990, Gokongwei incorporated
JG Summit Holdings was
floated as a publicly listed holding company on the Manila Stock Exchange. In March 1996, his airline,
Cebu Pacific Air began operations. In 2010, the airline underwent major refleeting with a $3 billion order with Airbus. From 2003, his telecommunications company
Digital Telecommunications Philippines spent nearly $800 million for its mobile carrier,
Sun Cellular, which was the third-largest mobile operator in the Philippines at that time before selling to the PLDT group for $1.7 billion. In 2013, his company bought the stake of San Miguel Corporation in
Meralco, Philippines's largest power distributor for close to $1.8 billion. In July 2014, Universal Robina acquired
Griffin's Foods from
Pacific Equity Partners, a New Zealand food producer for $609 million. In 2014, Gokongwei attempted to mastermind a $1 billion
corporate takeover of United Industrial Corporation Ltd (UIC), a Singaporean property giant of which he owned in excess of 30%. UIC controls Singapore Land, which is one of the biggest property landholders in Singapore. He also owned
Robinsons Retail Holdings, Inc. and Robinsons Land Corporation. The Gokongwei family controls over $20 billion of combined market capitalization for all the companies they own. In February 2008,
Forbes Asia magazine's first Heroes of Philanthropy list included four Filipinos – Gokongwei,
Jaime Zobel de Ayala, Ramón del Rosario Jr. and Oscar López. The list was composed of four philanthropists each from 13 selected countries and territories in Asia. ==Publications==