Shaul Nehemia Eisenberg (Hebrew: שאול אייזנברג; 22 September 1921[1] – 27 March 1997) was an Israeli businessman and billionaire tycoon.
Within a decade, he managed to mediate a vast variety of projects, such as developing production lines for recycled paper and purchasing airplanes and trains.
Until the mid-1960s, Eisenberg was the primary factor and catalyst in the commerce between South Korea and Japan to Western countries.
With Israel Corporation he began purchasing some holdings in the companies Zim Integrated Shipping Services, Oil Refineries, and others.
Jonathan Zohovsky, his daughter's husband, as well as Michael Albin, who was the manager of the group, assisted him.
After the Israeli 1983 stock market crash, the group had significant losses, and later on the police found that the company had been hiding information from its stockholders.