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Billionaire Clan in Focus After Leicester Owner Killed in Chopper Crash

The crash happened about 45 minutes after he’d been watching his team play West Ham in the English Premier League on Saturday.

Billionaire Clan in Focus After Leicester Owner Killed in Chopper Crash
Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha, chairman of King Power International Group and owner of Leicester City football club. (Photographer: Dario Pignatelli/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- The helicopter crash that killed Thai billionaire and Leicester City soccer club Chairman Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha puts a spotlight on the clan that helps run a duty-free business empire built over almost three decades.

While the Srivaddhanaprabhas are famous for their turnaround of Leicester City, culminating in one of the greatest sports upsets when the club became English champions, the family’s fortune is derived mostly from its duty-free giant back home, King Power Group.

Billionaire Clan in Focus After Leicester Owner Killed in Chopper Crash

Vichai, King Power’s chairman, amassed a net worth of $3.3 billion at the helm of the firm, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. The country’s record tourism boom drew huge numbers of passengers to the key Thai airports where King Power is the monopoly provider of duty-free stores under concessions from Airports of Thailand Pcl.

The crash happened about 45 minutes after Vichai had been watching his team play West Ham in the English Premier League on Saturday. The chopper faltered shortly after takeoff and slammed into a parking lot, bursting into flames. Vichai was one of five people killed in the crash, Leicester City said in a statement. Separately, the U.K.’s Air Accidents Investigation Branch said in a statement Monday that inspectors have recovered the chopper’s flight data recorder and are working on the device.

"Leicester City was a family under his leadership," the club said as it postponed soccer matches scheduled this week.

Billionaire Clan in Focus After Leicester Owner Killed in Chopper Crash

His sudden death comes as state-run Airports of Thailand prepares a tender to award the next concession for the sprawling duty-free stores at Suvarnabhumi, Thailand’s main international airport in the capital Bangkok. The current concession is due to expire in 2020, and foreign companies such as South Korea’s Lotte Corp. have shown interest in the business. Reports indicate domestic firms the Mall Group, Central Group and Bangkok Airways Pcl are among those that may also compete.

Royal Warrant

King Power is the largest duty-free retailer in Thailand. The family also has a minority stake in Thai AirAsia, a unit of Asia’s biggest discount carrier, AirAsia Group Bhd., according to a company statement released in December 2017.

The family name Srivaddhanaprabha was bestowed upon them by Thailand’s late King Bhumibol Adulyadej and loosely translates as light of progressive glory. That came after the monarch gave the rare honor of a royal warrant to Vichai, according to the ceremony in which Vichai received an honorary degree from the University of Leicester.

Billionaire Clan in Focus After Leicester Owner Killed in Chopper Crash

Vichai’s Son Aiyawatt Srivaddhanaprabha is chief executive officer of King Power and vice chairman of Leicester City. Filings show that Aiyawatt is the biggest individual shareholder after Vichai in the AirAsia unit.

Most of the family’s King Power shares are held through Thailand-based V&A Holdings, according to a filing retrieved in June 2016 from Orbis, a database of company information published by Bureau van Dijk.

Billionaire’s Family

Vichai’s wife Aimon Srivaddhanaprabha is a King Power vice chairman, according to the firm’s website. Another son, Apichet Srivaddhanaprabha, along with sisters Voramas Srivaddhanaprabha and Aroonroong Srivaddhanaprabha, are also part of the executive team.

Vichai was at the head of a consortium called Asian Football Investments that purchased Leicester City Football Club in 2010. Under his ownership, Leicester won promotion to the English Premier League in 2014. The club was crowned champion against overwhelming odds two years later.

“I came to the football industry with Leicester City because of my love for football and the club and its fans have already repaid me several times over with their passion and loyalty," Vichai said upon receiving the honorary degree in 2016.

Billionaire Clan in Focus After Leicester Owner Killed in Chopper Crash

Underdog Story

The family built a rapport with fans by offering freebies such as beer and donuts for Vichai’s birthday. His son Aiyawatt, known as “Top,” took to the victory stage in a televised ceremony after the 2016 upset.

“Hello champions,” he said to a cheering crowd. “I think we need a bigger stadium, huh?"

The underdog story started in Thailand, where Vichai founded King Power in 1989 and won a license to set up the country’s first downtown duty-free shop at a mall in Bangkok.

The company’s big break came when it was awarded exclusive rights to run duty-free and tax-free concessions at Thailand’s key airports. The firm also secured the right to manage all other commercial space at Suvarnabhumi airport, which opened in 2006, according to the company website.

Passenger Boom

In the first nine months of 2018, almost 80 million passengers came through Suvarnabhumi and the capital’s second airport, Don Mueang, another King Power concession. While tourism growth has sputtered recently, the sector remains a key engine of Southeast Asia’s second-largest economy.

In April, Vichai and his family acquired assets from the Mahanakhon real-estate project in Bangkok for about $423 million, which includes a skyscraper billed as the city’s tallest.

Vichai navigated Thailand’s complex political environment of elections followed by coups, while defending against challenges as he expanded King Power. Most recently, a Thai court dismissed a case alleging the Thai government hadn’t received all the fees due from the operation of duty-free concessions.

--With assistance from Siraphob Thanthong-Knight, Suttinee Yuvejwattana and Ben Stupples.

To contact the reporters on this story: Anuchit Nguyen in Bangkok at anguyen@bloomberg.net;Natnicha Chuwiruch in Bangkok at nchuwiruch@bloomberg.net;Blake Schmidt in Hong Kong at bschmidt16@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Sunil Jagtiani at sjagtiani@bloomberg.net, James Ludden

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.