Tan Su Shan is the CEO and director of DBS Group.
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A night with Tan Su Shan, CEO and director of DBS Group, was offered by public sale home Sotheby’s on Saturday for 18,900 Singapore {dollars} ($14,790) to the successful bidder — greater than double the pre-sale estimate of about SG$6,000 to SG$8,000.
The night contains pre-dinner champagne, a six-person personal dinner hosted by Tan and a non-public tour at Singapore’s Nationwide Gallery, an artwork museum housed in two nationwide monuments, in response to Sotheby’s.
“Set in a chic and intimate setting, this dinner guarantees stimulating dialog and distinctive firm – preferrred for the discerning bidder looking for inspiration, connection, and a seat on the desk with one among Singapore’s most esteemed figures,” in response to the public sale home.
Tan, who took over the helm of Southeast Asia’s largest financial institution in March this yr, has over 35 years of expertise in banking and wealth administration. She beforehand labored in senior roles at Morgan Stanley and Citi, and joined DBS Financial institution in 2010 because the group head of shopper banking and wealth administration.
Shares of the corporate have jumped over 10% since Tan took over as the primary feminine Chief Govt Officer of the Singapore-based financial institution.
Huge bidders
In terms of charity auctions, providing meals with celebrities and high enterprise leaders is a well-established observe, particularly when the highest 1% is within the room.
In 2022, a bidder paid over $19 million to dine with American investor and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway, Warren Buffett, to learn a San Francisco charity. A Singaporean man additionally paid greater than $2 million to have lunch with Buffett in 2014.
This auctioned expertise with Tan was a part of Nationwide Gallery Singapore’s tenth anniversary gala. Greater than SG$2.8 million was raised via the fundraising occasion held on Saturday, Sept. 13.
The funds raised from the occasion shall be used to “advance the Gallery’s mission of creating artwork accessible to all – from enabling new exhibitions, deepening curatorial analysis, and increasing programmes that interact youngsters, seniors, and underserved communities,” in response to an announcement from the museum.
The public sale, managed by Sotheby’s, came about on the gala and featured near 90 “uncommon artworks and luxurious experiences,” together with an art work by Chinese language modern ink artist Li Huayi, which offered for SG$517,000, a file for an auctioned merchandise on the Gallery.

