Chapter 38: The Birth of TG Enterprise
In the Raffles Place.
Timothy walked into the lobby of the law firm with a folder tucked under his arm, blazer on because Ms. Lim had told him to take the bankers seriously. His hoodie was folded and pushed into the backpack like a secret from his past life.
The reception area smelled faintly of coffee and leather. A junior associate greeted him with the sort of politeness that never reached the eyes. Ms. Lim appeared from a glass-walled conference room, already in motion. She smiled the small, economical smile of people who knew how to make big things happen without theatre.
"Good morning, Mr. Guerrero," she said, and gestured toward the conference room. "We’ll walk through the corporate documents again before we execute. The banker will join us in thirty minutes."
Timothy sat and smoothed his palms over his knees. On the table lay the papers he’d signed the night before: the engagement letter, a draft of the company constitution, nominee consents prepared in blank, a model shareholder agreement. Ms. Lim clicked through a slide deck on the monitor, each slide a compact, calm map of the path ahead.
"We’ve reserved the name TG Enterprise Pte. Ltd.," she explained. "It’s distinct, it’s credible, and it reads as a technology R&D and IP licensing company. Good for your narrative with the banks and with NVIDIA."
Timothy said the name aloud and it landed well in his mouth. TG Enterprise. It sounded like a company. It sounded, unexpectedly, like possibility.
She walked him through the essential clauses one more time: the authorised capital, a small number of ordinary shares issued to the initial subscriber (the firm’s nominee trustee) pending the share transfer to the beneficial owner; the role of the company secretary to ensure corporate filings and compliance; the limited liability protections that separated personal assets from corporate obligations. Ms. Lim emphasized the point a few times—Singapore’s corporate law favored clarity, transparency, and clean records. That was the guarantee he was buying: legitimacy that couldn’t be easily undone.
"When we execute," she said, "we’ll submit the incorporation application to ACRA, the Accounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority. Their turnaround for a clean file is often within hours. With our corporate secretary on standby we can register TG Enterprise today. I’ll prepare the resolution to be signed by the nominee director consenting to his appointment. He will act as the local director until we put in place any alternative structure you prefer."
The door opened and a man in a charcoal suit entered. Banking, clean-shaven, the kind of person who might have been a general in a logistics army. He introduced himself as Adrian, private client manager from DBS Treasures.
"Morning, Mr. Guerrero. Congratulations on the engagement. We’ve reviewed the preliminary file from Ms. Lim and are prepared to proceed with an initial onboarding." He placed a slim folder on the table that contained an account-opening checklist, a timeline, and the names of the compliance officers who would handle the case.
Adrian’s presence was the reality check Timothy had expected. This was where the paperwork became a living thing. The bank would not simply accept a forwarded email and a handshake. There would be interviews, verifications, legal confirmations, the kinds of things that turned fiction into finance.
"We will need the fully executed incorporation documents before the wire can be accepted into a corporate account," Adrian explained. "Once TG Enterprise is incorporated and the company board is properly constituted, we’ll schedule an in-person meeting for account signatories and compliance interviews. For clients of this profile the bank issues a dedicated relationship manager and escalates the setup internally. We can provisionally reserve an account number in the system once the ACRA registration is complete. That reservation helps prevent administrative delays when the wire lands."
Ms. Lim called for the nominee director to be brought in. A middle-aged man with a calm, impassive face and a stamped consent form took a seat. He introduced himself, Mr. Lim Wei, a professional nominee director engaged through the firm’s network. He spoke in short sentences and signed his name with the practiced calm of a man who had consented to dozens of such roles for clients he would never meet.
Timothy watched the signatures like a series of small detonations. One by one the documents were completed: director consent, the company constitution signed by the initial subscriber, the form that appointed Ms. Lim’s corporate secretarial team as company secretary, the resolution empowering the nominee director to open a corporate account in Singapore.
"Do you understand the duties this entails?" Ms. Lim asked Mr. Lim Wei quietly, and the director nodded. "You understand your obligations under the Companies Act."
"Yes," he replied, and the word sounded both formal and durable.
Ms. Lim turned to Timothy. "We file now. Once ACRA returns the company registration, it will assign a Unique Entity Number. That is the company’s legal identity in Singapore. With that in hand we activate our registered address for you and circulate the company seal."
She opened the portal on her screen and finished the online submission. For a moment the office was a quiet hum of people who had done this many times. The progress bar crawled. Then, within an hour, faster than Timothy had hoped, an email pinged: ACRA had registered TG Enterprise Pte. Ltd. The Unique Entity Number flashed on the monitor like a small, authoritative star.
"You’re officially a company," Ms. Lim said, voice lighter than it had been this morning. "Welcome to corporate life."
Adrian from the bank stood and offered his hand. "Shall we go to the branch? The compliance team has cleared a rapid-movement slot for you this afternoon. We’ll need your biometric details, verified IDs, and the signed board resolution authorising the account signatories. We’ll also want to see the NVIDIA contract, full redactions accepted, but we need the financial terms to be visible. That explains the source of funds."
Timothy felt dizzy with how quickly the world rotated from abstract into legal fact. He’d imagined months of waiting, a thousand sticky complications. Instead, within little more than a day, TG Enterprise existed in Singapore’s registers and a bank was ready to prioritize him.
They moved as an efficient chain: photos taken, fingerprints captured for bank KYC, signatures cross-checked. The bank’s compliance officer walked through a series of questions, business purpose, expected transaction volumes, anticipated counterparty jurisdictions. Timothy answered, leaning into Ms. Lim’s counsel when he needed a phrase polished.
At midday they sat again in the firm’s conference room with printed copies of TG Enterprise’s certificate of incorporation and the opening forms. Ms. Lim placed a pen before Timothy.
"This is the shareholders’ agreement," she said. "We have the nominee shareholder holding on trust pending the transfer to you as the beneficial owner once the bank accepts it. We include a clause requiring any share transfer to be subject to a board resolution which our firm will manage for you. It preserves order while giving you control under the trust."
Timothy signed where his name was needed.
When the formalities were done and the folders had multiplied into a neat stack, Timothy’s voice found its question.
"Can I... use TG Enterprise like my company?" he asked. "When I start operating, if I want to sell, license, or even hire engineers, can I just use this company as the brand? Invoice through it, bring in partners, make deals? Legally?"
Ms. Lim looked at him with a small, almost fond seriousness. "Yes. TG Enterprise is a legal person. It can enter contracts, own property, employ staff, license intellectual property, and sue or be sued. From the moment of incorporation it is a corporate entity capable of doing business under Singapore law. That is the advantage. You aren’t operating as an individual, you’re operating through a company that limits personal liability and creates a credible commercial face for your activities."
"You know the reason why I created this is to avoid taxes from the Philippines, right?" Timothy said carefully, almost like he was testing the ground.
Ms. Lim’s eyes didn’t flicker. "We understand the context. Our role is not to pass judgment, Mr. Guerrero. Our role is to ensure that what you do here complies fully with Singaporean law. TG Enterprise is a Singapore-incorporated company. That means its tax obligations are here, not in the Philippines, unless you actively remit income back. From this point forward, what matters is how you operate it."
Timothy leaned back, processing, then gestured toward the neat stack of signed papers. "But just to be clear, those other names on the forms? The nominee director, the secretary, they’re not really part of my company. They won’t be taking a slice of anything I do, right? I’m the only one running TG Enterprise."
"Correct," Ms. Lim said, her tone even. "The nominees are formal requirements under law. They fulfill statutory obligations, but they have no claim on your business operations or profits. They cannot interfere with your decisions as long as you meet your contractual obligations to them, their fees, their roles, their signatures on necessary filings. Think of them as scaffolding. You are the structure."
Adrian added smoothly, "The bank will recognize you as the ultimate beneficial owner. For all practical purposes, TG Enterprise is your company alone."
"Okay, that’s good."