Is it a public body issuing reprimands or a private club?
Lynette Khoo 19 April 2012
Court debate: Mr. Singh (above) and Mr. Tan have locked horns in the court over SGX’s hybrid nature
Is the Singapore Exchange (SGX) a public body exercising a public function when reprimanding companies and their directors? Or is it a private club, dealing with its members?
The question was hotly debated yesterday after a former independent director (ID) of China Sky Chemical Fibre sought to have a public reprimand from SGX overturned by the court.
SGX is “not a creature of statute” and its relationship with listed companies is a contractual one, said Davinder Singh, chief executive officer of Drew & Napier LLC, who represented the Exchange.
Its power to reprimand companies or directors is not subject to judicial review since it is rooted in private law, he added.
Tan Cheng Han, a consultant at TSMP Law Corporation, contested this view. “To the extent that the Exchange is exercising a power that is inherent or necessary for the proper regulation of the securities market in Singapore, it is exercising a power of public character,” he said.
The two Senior Counsels locked horns on the grey area of SGX’s dual commercial and regulatory roles yesterday in court in an unprecedented lawsuit brought by a former director of a listed company against SGX.
Yeap Wai Kong, former ID of China Sky, wants to overturn a public reprimand from SGX through a quashing order from the court. The company and its directors were publicly rapped on Dec 16 after the group’s failure to comply with SGX’s directive to appoint a special auditor.
SGX’s hybrid nature has long been a source of market debate but the lawsuit has probably brought the discussion on the source of its powers in court for the first time.
Representing SGX, Mr. Singh stressed that SGX’s position is different from that of the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS), which is a statutory body that regulates the securities market and SGX itself.
Under Singapore’s “unique framework”, companies that seek to be admitted into the official list enter a “consensual submission” to abide by SGX listing rules.
SGX’s power to reprimand arises because “the Company and the Applicant (Mr. Yeap) both agreed to be bound by the Listing Rules, thereby consensually submitting to the Exchange’s power under Listing Rule 720(4) to issue the Reprimand”, Mr. Singh said in his written submissions for SGX.
“Like any other private club, the Exchange has rules governing the conduct of its members, and seeks to ensure compliance with its rules. This does not lead to the conclusion that the Exchange was exercising a public function in issuing the reprimand.”
Companies are obliged to abide by SGX rules and they can say “no” to any SGX directive only through the Board, he added. Mr. Singh pointed out that announcements by China Sky rejecting SGX’s directive were issued “by order of the Board” and there was no evidence that Mr. Yeap had disagreed with them.
“Distinction between the Board and its directors is an artificial one,” he said. “To say that there is a need for notices to be issued to individual directors is a weak point”.
Judicial review is a review of the manner in which a body makes a decision. In a judicial review, the court is concerned not with the merits of a decision but the process by which that decision has been made.
Representing Mr. Yeap, Mr. Tan argued that since the court has already decided that it has jurisdiction to hear this case, the decisions made by SGX are susceptible to judicial review.
“A hybrid body like SGX that discharges a public function is under the obligation to act judicially or fairly,” he said, adding that SGX did not give Mr. Yeap an opportunity to be heard before issuing a public reprimand on him, hence breaching natural rules of justice.
“I can find no piece of correspondence or a phone call from a SGX representative to the applicant to say that it is issuing a public reprimand to him and ‘please explain yourself’,” Mr. Tan argued.
Neither was there a show-cause letter to Mr. Yeap, similar to the ones issued to China Sky and another independent director at that time, Lai Seng Kwoon.
Mr. Singh argued, however, that a show-cause letter was issued separately to Mr. Lai because he was asked to explain his personal role in the interested person transactions with China Sky and his potential conflict of interest as chairman of the audit committee.
SGX had in January applied to the court to compel China Sky to comply with its directives, but executed a sudden withdrawal of its court application within two weeks without any reasons given.
“I find it strange that the respondent (SGX) is not pressing the company now to appoint auditors but is allowing the public reprimand to stand,” Mr. Tan said.
Mr. Yeap was appointed to China Sky’s Board in May last year before quitting on Jan 12 with two other IDs, Er Kwong Wah and Mr. Lai, citing the company’s non-compliance with SGX’s order.
The Commercial Affairs Department is now probing Fujian-based fibre maker for possible breaches of securities laws after a number of irregularities were flagged by SGX.
MAS has also sought a court order to freeze the assets in Singapore belonging to the former chief executive of China Sky, Huang Zhong Xuan.
TWO former senior employees of UOB Kay Hian Private Limited (UOBKH) were charged on Wednesday for allegedly lying to the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) in relation to reports on a then Catalist aspirant. Lan Kang Ming, 38, and Wee Toon Lee, 34, each face three charges of providing MAS with false information in October 2018 in relation to due diligence reports on an unidentified company applying to list on the Catalist board of the Singapore Exchange. MAS said in a media statement on Wednesday that it was performing an onsite inspection of UOBKH between June and August 2018, to assess the latter's controls, policies and procedures in relation to its role as an issue manager for Initial Public Offering (IPOs). During the examination, Lan and Wee were said to have provided different versions of a due diligence report relating to background checks on a company applying to be listed on the Catalist board of the Singapore Exchange. UOBKH had acted as the issue manager
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Is it a public body issuing reprimands or a private club?
Lynette Khoo
19 April 2012
Court debate: Mr. Singh (above) and Mr. Tan have locked horns in the court over SGX’s hybrid nature
Is the Singapore Exchange (SGX) a public body exercising a public function when reprimanding companies and their directors? Or is it a private club, dealing with its members?
The question was hotly debated yesterday after a former independent director (ID) of China Sky Chemical Fibre sought to have a public reprimand from SGX overturned by the court.
SGX is “not a creature of statute” and its relationship with listed companies is a contractual one, said Davinder Singh, chief executive officer of Drew & Napier LLC, who represented the Exchange.
Its power to reprimand companies or directors is not subject to judicial review since it is rooted in private law, he added.
Tan Cheng Han, a consultant at TSMP Law Corporation, contested this view. “To the extent that the Exchange is exercising a power that is inherent or necessary for the proper regulation of the securities market in Singapore, it is exercising a power of public character,” he said.
The two Senior Counsels locked horns on the grey area of SGX’s dual commercial and regulatory roles yesterday in court in an unprecedented lawsuit brought by a former director of a listed company against SGX.
Yeap Wai Kong, former ID of China Sky, wants to overturn a public reprimand from SGX through a quashing order from the court. The company and its directors were publicly rapped on Dec 16 after the group’s failure to comply with SGX’s directive to appoint a special auditor.
SGX’s hybrid nature has long been a source of market debate but the lawsuit has probably brought the discussion on the source of its powers in court for the first time.
Representing SGX, Mr. Singh stressed that SGX’s position is different from that of the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS), which is a statutory body that regulates the securities market and SGX itself.
Under Singapore’s “unique framework”, companies that seek to be admitted into the official list enter a “consensual submission” to abide by SGX listing rules.
SGX’s power to reprimand arises because “the Company and the Applicant (Mr. Yeap) both agreed to be bound by the Listing Rules, thereby consensually submitting to the Exchange’s power under Listing Rule 720(4) to issue the Reprimand”, Mr. Singh said in his written submissions for SGX.
“Like any other private club, the Exchange has rules governing the conduct of its members, and seeks to ensure compliance with its rules. This does not lead to the conclusion that the Exchange was exercising a public function in issuing the reprimand.”
Companies are obliged to abide by SGX rules and they can say “no” to any SGX directive only through the Board, he added. Mr. Singh pointed out that announcements by China Sky rejecting SGX’s directive were issued “by order of the Board” and there was no evidence that Mr. Yeap had disagreed with them.
“Distinction between the Board and its directors is an artificial one,” he said. “To say that there is a need for notices to be issued to individual directors is a weak point”.
Judicial review is a review of the manner in which a body makes a decision. In a judicial review, the court is concerned not with the merits of a decision but the process by which that decision has been made.
Representing Mr. Yeap, Mr. Tan argued that since the court has already decided that it has jurisdiction to hear this case, the decisions made by SGX are susceptible to judicial review.
“I can find no piece of correspondence or a phone call from a SGX representative to the applicant to say that it is issuing a public reprimand to him and ‘please explain yourself’,” Mr. Tan argued.
Neither was there a show-cause letter to Mr. Yeap, similar to the ones issued to China Sky and another independent director at that time, Lai Seng Kwoon.
Mr. Singh argued, however, that a show-cause letter was issued separately to Mr. Lai because he was asked to explain his personal role in the interested person transactions with China Sky and his potential conflict of interest as chairman of the audit committee.
SGX had in January applied to the court to compel China Sky to comply with its directives, but executed a sudden withdrawal of its court application within two weeks without any reasons given.
“I find it strange that the respondent (SGX) is not pressing the company now to appoint auditors but is allowing the public reprimand to stand,” Mr. Tan said.
Mr. Yeap was appointed to China Sky’s Board in May last year before quitting on Jan 12 with two other IDs, Er Kwong Wah and Mr. Lai, citing the company’s non-compliance with SGX’s order.
The Commercial Affairs Department is now probing Fujian-based fibre maker for possible breaches of securities laws after a number of irregularities were flagged by SGX.
MAS has also sought a court order to freeze the assets in Singapore belonging to the former chief executive of China Sky, Huang Zhong Xuan.