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Fugitive Hong Kong tycoon Joseph Lau to auction off HK$151 million worth of Chinese imperial porcelain through Sotheby’s

  • Eight pieces of antique porcelain, each valued between HK$1.5 million and HK$65 million, to be put up for sale on April 29 in Hong Kong
  • Porcelain portfolio accounts for a fraction of Lau’s collection amassed since 1978, sources say

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Fugitive Hong Kong tycoon Joseph Lau. Photo: Felix Wong

Fugitive Hong Kong tycoon Joseph Lau Luen-hung is to put on sale a portfolio of Chinese imperial porcelain valued up to HK$151 million (US$19 million) through auction house Sotheby’s in April after suffering losses in stock market investments.

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Market sources said on Tuesday that the portfolio accounted for a fraction of Lau’s collection that included antique porcelain and furniture, paintings, sculptures, gemstones and wine he had amassed since 1978, when he was 27.

Sotheby’s Asia chairman Nicholas Chow said Lau’s latest collection up for sale included eight pieces of Chinese imperial porcelain that originated from the Ming and Qing dynasties, each valued between HK$1.5 million and HK$65 million.

Lau’s latest collection up for sale includes eight pieces of Chinese imperial porcelain that originated from the Ming and Qing dynasties. The yellow dish was from the Ming dynasty. Photo: Sotheby’s
Lau’s latest collection up for sale includes eight pieces of Chinese imperial porcelain that originated from the Ming and Qing dynasties. The yellow dish was from the Ming dynasty. Photo: Sotheby’s

The 70-year-old tycoon, who from time to time has traded through Sotheby’s, is due to offload the porcelain portfolio on April 29 in Hong Kong.

The sources said Lau favoured gemstones under the influence of his late mother, who could not bear to buy jewellery for herself and instead saved up for her children’s studies.

“So whenever Lau could afford gemstones, he would buy them for his mother to make up for her sacrifices,” a source said.

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A spokesman for Lau and his wife Chan Hoi-wan declined to comment on the sale and any correlation with the billions of Hong Kong dollar losses the couple and their family-controlled developer Chinese Estates Holdings incurred from the sale of China Evergrande shares and bonds last year.

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