---
title: "Brother of Great Eagle Chairman Sells HK$19M Apartment as Investors Seek Liquidity"
date: 2026-03-20
author: ""
url: https://panamadaily.news/2026/03/20/great-eagle-brother-sells-hk-residential-unit/
categories:
  - "Business"
  - "World"
tags:
  - "Great Eagle Holdings"
  - "Hong Kong property"
  - "Lo Ying-sui"
  - "real estate market"
  - "residential sale"
---

# Brother of Great Eagle Chairman Sells HK$19M Apartment as Investors Seek Liquidity

## What Happened

Lo Ying-sui, the younger brother of Great Eagle Holdings chairman Lo Ka-shui, has begun selling residential property as some investors seek to preserve liquidity amid an uncertain property market cycle. Land Registry records show a unit registered under Joy Eagle was sold to King Faith International for HK$19 million (US$2.4 million) on March 17.

## Background

A company search identified Joy Eagle’s directors as Lo Ying-sui and his wife, Lim Boon Tuang Lynda. The sale comes amid reports of a Hong Kong market recovery, although the transaction has been interpreted by some observers as a signal that certain investors remain cautious and prefer cash or liquid assets while the market cycle remains uncertain.

## What This Means

The transaction is notable because of the seller’s family link to the leadership of Great Eagle Holdings, a well-known property group in Hong Kong. While the sale itself involves a single residential unit, it adds to market chatter about how private investors and connected parties are responding to fluctuating conditions in the city’s property sector.

For Panama and Latin America, the direct economic impact of this specific sale is likely limited. However, regional investors and fund managers who follow global property trends may view such moves as a cautionary sign about liquidity preferences during recovery phases. That could influence risk assessments for funds or investors with exposure to Asian real estate markets.

Observers will watch whether this sale is an isolated case or part of a broader pattern of disposals by individuals linked to major property groups. Any sustained wave of such sales could feed into sentiment around the pace and durability of Hong Kong’s property recovery.