Early years The predecessor of the group, Sun Hung Kai Enterprises Co., Ltd. (), was founded in 1963 by
Kwok Tak-seng, together with
Fung King-hey and
Lee Shau Kee. The current legal entity of the holding company of the group, Sun Hung Kai Properties Limited, was incorporated on 14 July 1972 and was listed on the
Hong Kong stock exchange on 23 August 1972. In 1977, SHKP moved its head office to Connaught Centre, Central (now known as
Jardine House). In 1978, SHKP established Kai Shing Management Services Limited, a
property manager. In 1978, SHKP put on sale the first multi-block residential estate,
Tsuen Wan Centre (first phase). Also in 1978, SHKP became one of the 33 constituent stocks listed on the Hang Seng Index. In 1979, SHKP established Sun Hung Kai Properties Insurance Limited, which was a provider of
general insurance.
1980s and 1990s In 1981, SHKP acquired an interest in
Kowloon Motor Bus, a public transport provider. The corporation moved its headquarters to
Sun Hung Kai Centre, on an area of newly reclaimed land in
Wan Chai, in 1982. In 1991, SHKP acquired
Wilson Parking. In 1992, SHKP finished the construction of
Central Plaza in Wan Chai, the tallest building in Asia at the time of completion. In the same year the company diversified into mobile telephony with the establishment of
SmarTone, now one of Hong Kong's dominant mobile providers. This subsidiary was listed in Hong Kong in 1996. In 1993, SHKP acquired World Trade Centre, Causeway Bay. From the mid-1990s the company undertook property development related to the new airport railway, including sites at the
Airport Express Hong Kong Station. In 1998, Route 3 (Country Park Section) opened. In 1999, Shanghai Central Plaza commercial building was completed.
21st century In 2000, SHKP won tender for
Kowloon Station Development Packages 5, 6 & 7 – now the
International Commerce Centre (ICC) complex. The same year, the company signed a land-use transfer agreement with Shanghai Lujiazui Finance and Trade Zone Development Company for Shanghai IFC project. In 2005, SHKP opened APM, Hong Kong's first late-night retail centre. In 2005, SHKP acquired Seiyu (Sha Tin) Company Limited. In 2009, Ma Wan Park Noah's Ark opened, the first Christian theme park in Hong Kong. In 2013, SHKP acquired a commercial site with 7.6 million square feet of gross floor area in the Shanghai Xujiahui district. In 2015, SHKP became Title and Charity Sponsor of the first Hong Kong Cyclothon. In 2016, SHKP donated land in Yuen Long to Hong Kong Sheng Kung Hui for the construction of an integrated service centre. In 2019, SHKP won the tender for the commercial site atop the West Kowloon High-Speed Rail Terminus. SHKP's bid of more than HK$42 billion won the 60,000 square metre site, which could be used for office, shopping and hotel developments. The Kwok family invested HK$9.4 billion (US$1.2 billion) for a 25% stake in the office towers. In June 2024, SHKP was among ten companies to receive the (Building and Construction Information)
BCI Asia Top 10 Developers Award.
Corruption probe In 2012, SHKP Executive Director Thomas Chan was arrested by the
Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) on 19 March, along with eight people linked to the company on 29 March. Co-Chairmen
Thomas Kwok and
Raymond Kwok and five others were arrested by the ICAC as part of an extensive corruption probe.
Rafael Hui, former Chief Secretary, was also taken in for questioning. They were later released on bail. The probe caused a 15 per cent fall in the company's share price. In December 2014, the jury convicted Thomas Kwok and Rafael Hui of bribery, and Hui was convicted of four more charges relating to misconduct in public office. The jury acquitted Raymond Kwok of all charges.
List of chairmen •
Kwok Tak-seng (1972–1990); founder •
Walter Kwok (1990–2008); oldest son of Kwok Tak-seng •
Kwong Siu-hing (2008–2011); wife of Kwok Tak-seng •
Raymond Kwok and
Thomas Kwok (2011–2014); joint chairmen, younger sons of Kwok Tak-seng •
Raymond Kwok (2014– ); youngest son of Kwok Tak-seng ==Business development==