Dennis Ang Uy was born and raised in Davao City[4] to an ethnic Chinese family based in Davao, which is part of the Uys' third generation. Uy's grandparents, Ega Uy and Tao Sui Eng were ethnic Chinese who settled in Davao as merchants. They had a store which sold fishing equipment and bread while his parents ran a small business which sold copra.[5]
He is the eldest among siblings.[6] According to his own account, Dennis played basketball as a childhood hobby while at the same time sold school supplies and basketball cards to his classmates.[5]
In 1993, Uy studied in De La Salle University in Manila to pursue a Bachelor of Science in Business Management degree and started to trade in the stock market.[5] Since he had an average academic performance by his own account he decided against being a lawyer and described himself to be poor in memorization to consider pursuing a career in law.[6]
Career
Business career
After finishing his tertiary education, Dennis Uy helped ran his family's business and interacted with older businessmen.[5] His family's business was based in Tagum, and was involved in mining, supermarkets, car dealership among other industries. Uy worked with his family for ten years and at one point ran seven firms simultaneously.[6] He decided to start his own business to gain independence as he felt that he did not have the freedom he aspired for himself working for his family.
He started his own business using income he gained from trading stocks while he was still in college and set up Dencio's Kamayan, a barbecue store (which shares the same name but unrelated to a Manila-based restaurant chain). He started his business portfolio independently without the aid of his family members. The barbeque chain grew to at least eight outlets before handing over the business to his sister when he decided to focus on participating in the petroleum industry.[5][6] He also operated two community newspapers which served Davao City but both became defunct.[6]
In 2002, he along his wife[5] founded Udenna Corporation, a holdings company[1] that would later manage his business interests in various industries. Within the same year, Phoenix Petroleum then known as the Oilink Mindanao Distribution Company was established. In 2004, the company was renamed as Davao Oil Terminal Services Corp. (DOTSCO)[7] As part of this business, Uy set up a six million-barrel oil terminal serving businesses in the Davao region.[5] Phoenix Petroleum adopted its name in 2006 and was listed in the Philippine Stock Exchange in 2007 and became the first Davao City-based company to join the stock market.[7]
He founded Chelsea Logistics Holdings Corp. (CLHC) which is involved in the shipping and logistics industry, and a passenger ferry company.[7]
In 2018, he bought 70% of ownership of Conti's Bakeshop and Restaurant.
Forbes estimated Uy's 2020 net worth at $650 million, ranking him as the Philippines' 22nd-richest.[9]
Dennis Uy's Udenna Corporation bought 100 million common shares of Atok-Big Wedge Co. Inc., where Uy is a director and vice chairman.[10] Atok-Big Wedge Co, Inc. a listed corporation in PSE, has 20% ownership of United Kingdom-based Forum Energy Ltd. which has the right of oil exploration in SC72 in the South China Sea. Forum Energy Ltd. has an ongoing talks with China for joint oil exploration after President Duterte– a close friend of Dennis Uy– lifted the moratorium on oil exploration.[11]
In September 2024, Uy sold Conti’s Bakeshop & Restaurant and Wendy’s Philippines, with his Eight8Ate Holdings Inc., to entrepreneur Crystal Jacinto.[12]
Diplomatic career
Uy is also a diplomat. He has been the honorary consul to Kazakhstan since November 2011.[13] and is tasked to develop the bilateral ties of the Philippines with the Central Asian nation.[14]
Government Service career
Uy was appointed in 2016 as the Presidential Adviser on Sports Development by then PresidentRodrigo Roa Duterte.
Graft complaint against Uy and his complaints against ABS-CBN
In 2021, a graft complaint was filed before the Ombudsman against Uy, Alfonso Cusi and several others over the sale of Chevron's investment in the Malampaya project to Udenna Corporation, wherein the anomalies allegedly resulted in losses to the government. Uy later filed cyberlibel complaints against ABS-CBN Corporation, whose news organization had reported on a complaint against him, claiming that the latter's articles were libelous. The Davao City Office of the Prosecutor, in its resolution dated May 5, 2022, dismissed these complaints for lack of probable cause, saying that the articles were not defamatory.[17]
Phoenix Petroleum smuggling case
On April 24, 2013, the Department of Justice charged Uy for alleged illegal importation of petroleum products.[18] The charges were dismissed in 2021.[19]
^Jara, Marifi (20 November 2018). "A glimpse of the beginnings of a growing empire". BusinessWorld. Retrieved 25 January 2019. But the most ambitious — and most controversial — undertaking so far of the 44-year-old entrepreneur [Uy] is in yet another sector: telecommunications.