Tetra Pak family quietly pours $11.6 billion into stocks, with bulk via Singapore entities

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The Rausing family, which hails from Sweden, made a fortune from Tetra Pak cartons.

The Rausing family, which hails from Sweden, made a fortune from Tetra Pak cartons.

PHOTO: TETRA PAK WEBSITE

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An entity based in the heart of Singapore’s financial district emerged as the biggest shareholder in International Flavours & Fragrances (IFF) nine years ago.

It turned out that the owner was the Rausing family, which hails from Sweden and made a fortune from Tetra Pak cartons. It is now also clear that the stake was one of the first public disclosures about how the media-shy clan deploys its billions.

Today, the family has amassed a stock portfolio worth around US$9 billion (S$11.6 billion) and spanning more than 100 companies in Europe and the US, according to a Bloomberg analysis of regulatory filings.

Through entities in Liechtenstein, Singapore and Switzerland the Rausings have a US$1.9 billion stake in IFF, US$2.4 billion in industrial-gas company Linde and US$2.2 billion in flavour-maker Givaudan and smaller holdings in companies from Apple to Wells Fargo, regulatory filings show.

The scale of these bets, which has not previously been reported, and the entities that hold them highlight the growing sophistication in how some of the world’s richest families manage their money, and the broader boom in the family office industry.

The vast majority of the US$9 billion is concentrated in just five stocks: IFF, Linde, Givaudan, Sensient Technologies, which makes specialty ingredients, and consumer-packaging company SIG Group. Those investments have been held by Singapore companies that ultimately are controlled by a Liechtenstein entity called Haldor Foundation.

Filings in Singapore show that two subsidiaries in the Republic – Winder Investments and Winder – periodically received infusions of tens or hundreds of millions of dollars, respectively.

A Switzerland-based investment firm called Longbow Finance held a portfolio of about 80 US-traded securities that added up to US$835 million as of March 31. Longbow has catered to the Rausing family’s wealth for decades.

Another Swiss investment firm, called Freemont Management, also held a broad portfolio of securities worth US$304 million at the end of March. Freemont was established in 1994 and was recorded as a subsidiary of Tetra Laval as recently as May 2025, according to Orbis, a database of company data.

The disclosures only comprise holdings in publicly traded securities that meet certain thresholds for size or complexity. It is possible that the three entities hold investments in other assets with different transparency rules.

It is difficult to discern how the bets have played out because the filings largely show their present value but often not their purchase price.

But the portfolio has kept growing regardless of share prices.

The source of the money remains unclear, like much else about the finances of the Rausings and Tetra Laval. The closely held company does not disclose its complete results, so it is not possible to determine how much of its potential profits is distributed to the owners.

It is also not clear which family members are the ultimate beneficiaries of the three investment entities. Previous news reports have named Finn, Jorn, and Kirsten Rausing, grandchildren of Tetra Laval founder Ruben Rausing, as the beneficiaries of Haldor.

The Bloomberg Billionaires Index credits each of the siblings with one-third of Tetra Laval, which helps put their respective net worth at about US$5.9 billion. But the index doesn’t allocate them a specific slice of either of the three investment firms.

The siblings, who are in their 60s and 70s, came in line to take over the business after their father, Mr Gad Rausing, bought out their uncle in 1995.

Mr Gad Rausing’s father, Ruben, was born in the small community of Raus in southern Sweden in 1895. He spent several years in New York where he studied at Columbia University. He saw the city’s self-service grocery stores and figured the concept would soon be adopted in Europe, which would drastically increase demand for hygienic and practical consumer-sized packages of grocery staples.

He returned home and started a packaging company. The tetrahedron-shaped milk carton, developed in the 1940s and 1950s, became a breakthrough product. In 2024, the company produced 178 billion packs and collected US$18.5 billion of revenue. BLOOMBERG

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