Published: Wednesday July 22, 2009 MYT 2:29:00 PM
Singapore Temasek, new CEO part over strategy
SINGAPORE: Singapore government investment fund Temasek said Charles "Chip" Goodyear won't take over as chief executive because of differences in strategy, a surprising reversal that leaves the wife of the prime minister in the company's top job.
Goodyear, who had been working alongside outgoing chief executive Ho Ching since March, will leave the sovereign wealth fund next month, Temasek said in a statement Tuesday.
The 51-year-old American would have been the first foreigner to head the government investment company.
Temasek in February named Goodyear, a former chief executive of the world's No. 1 mining company BHP Billiton, to take over on October 1 from Ho.
The wife of prime minister Lee Hsien Loong had headed Temasek since 2004 and announced her resignation days before the fund said it lost US$39 billion, or 31 percent of its assets, between March and November last year.
In tightly controlled Singapore, the appointment of Goodyear had been seen as a sign that the government was loosening its grip and acknowledging the need for specific expertise from abroad.
Now just five months later, that experiment appears to have been derailed.
"It's embarrassing for sure," said David Cohen, an economist with consultancy Action Economics in Singapore.
"This isn't the way they normally operate here. Professionalism has been the rule."
Temasek said the decision to part ways was in its and Goodyear's interests.
"The Temasek Board and Mr. Goodyear have concluded and accepted that there are differences regarding certain strategic issues that could not be resolved," the fund said in a statement.
Making the move even more unusual was the long vetting process Goodyear went through before accepting the job.
Goodyear, who has a masters of business administration from the Wharton School of Finance, University of Pennsylvania, said in February he had been in talks with Temasek for the previous 15 months.
"Surprising is the word," Cohen said.
"He was about to command a substantial portfolio. You wouldn't think he'd walk away from that very easily."
Temasek's investments were worth US$84 billion as of Nov. 30.
Ho, who has a master's degree in electrical engineering from Stanford University, said in February she would step away from the day-to-day operations of the fund.
"Chip brings capabilities that I don't have," Ho said at the time.
"I don't see myself as needing to direct it (Temasek) in any way."
Singapore's Ministry of Finance is Temasek's only shareholder.
The company, which is smaller than the city-state's other sovereign wealth fund, the Government of Singapore Investment Corp., owns large stakes in many of the country's biggest companies, including Singapore Telecommunications and Singapore Airlines. - AP
For another perspective from The Straits Times, a partner of Asia News Network, click here.
Latest business news from AP-Wire
- EPF’s 2009 payout will be better
- How to improve your investment skills
- Honda expands airbag inflation recall
- Google opens new social hub in face-off with Facebook
- KNM’s future needs may be more than RM3.4bil
- Bank Negara said to have rejected Mulpha’s application
- Billionaire Buffett says bailout money will be paid back
- Toyota seeks damage control, in public and private
- US$1b JV smelter for Sarawak
- US stocks up, Dow up above 10,000 again
- How to improve your investment skills
- US stocks up, Dow up above 10,000 again
- BCorp unit plans RM180mil solar photovoltaic power plant
- P1 sees more competitive prices for WiMAX services
- Oil, energy prices boosted by another winter blast
- Billionaire Buffett says bailout money will be paid back
- Google opens new social hub in face-off with Facebook
- Toyota seeks damage control, in public and private
- Honda expands airbag inflation recall
- Greece says call for aid would send ‘worst signal’


