countryside1

Friday, 07 June 2013 05:57

Royal Golden Eagle group

same site as Riau Andalan Paper & Pulp (RAPP, also known as “Riaupulp”). In 2011 APRIL described its mill in Riau "the biggest mill on the planet", with a production of "3.5 million tons of pulp and paper", with a production of $ 3.5 million tons of pulp and paper”.

APRIL is part of the the Royal Golden Eagle group of companies (RGE) formerly called Raja Garuda Mas Group (RGM), a large Indonesian conglomerate, controlled by Sukanto Tanoto and his family. Tanoto was born in Medan (north Sumatra) in 1949, but his father was a Chinese immigrant who changed his name from Tan Kang Ho. Sukanto Tanoto in 1967 took over his family business of importing car parts. At first, Tanoto tried to diversify his business interest by becoming a contract partner of the state-owned oil company Petramina. The real start for his sprawling business empire came in 1972, when he established the lumber company CV Karya Pelita followed in 1974 by the plywood company PT Raja Garuda Mas ("The Golden King Garuda" in Indonesian).
Based on the huge profits made in the forestry industry and his good connections with the Indonesian ruling elite, Tanoto’s business activities expanded rapidly until the financial crisis of 1997/98. At that time, the Raja Garuda Mas Group was active in the following lines of business:
  • agribusiness: coffee, cocoa, coconut, fishery, oil palm plantation, rubber, shrimp breeding;
  • industry; steel products, beverages, cellulose acetate resin chemical, pulp & paper, rayon fibre;
  • latex, foods, video tape recorders and others;
  • forestry: wood processing industry;
  • finance: insurance, banking, multi finance, securities, leasing, money changing;
  • trading: general trading & export and imports, retail;
  • mining: coal mining;
  • property: real estate, office buildings;
  • services: advertising, construction.

The Royal Golden Eagle Group has been involved in a default whose coasts were paid by Indonesian people. Its bank, called Unibank, in the 90ties lent hundreds of millions of dollars of its customers money to RGM companies. These companies were unable to pay many of these loans and in October 2000 Unibank was put under the control of the Indonesian Bank Restructuring Agency (IBRA). Despite efforts to revive the bank, it was closed down at the end of October 2001 by the Bank of Indonesia, the Indonesian central bank. Unibank's closure left IBRA with the obligation to pay back US$230 million to the customers of the bank. The IBRA has tried to hold Sukanto Tanoto responsible for the loans, but by 1999 Tanoto had already sold his shareholdings in the bank to a number of new owners.

Last modified on Thursday, 11 February 2016 15:55
Joomla templates by a4joomla