Dual-listed China New Town seeks delisting from SGX
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China New Town Development Co is seeking a voluntary
delisting from the Singapore Exchange (SGX) to trade only on the Stock Exchange
of Hong Kong to save on costs and improve liquidity.
Dual-listed China New Town seeks delisting from SGX
Kenneth Lim 19 October 2016
China New Town Development Co is seeking a voluntary delisting from the Singapore Exchange (SGX) to trade only on the Stock Exchange of Hong Kong to save on costs and improve liquidity.
The China-based township developer is making an exit offer of seven Singapore cents a share to Singapore shareholders. Those who prefer to stay invested in the company may arrange to have their shares transferred to Hong Kong.
China New Town says its delisting move in Singapore is not a privatisation exercise as it intends to maintain its Hong Kong primary listing.
The exit offer price is higher than what China New Town's Singapore shareholders have seen in more than a year. The last time the stock traded at seven Singapore cents or higher was on July 27, 2015, according to data from ShareInvestor.com.
When China New Town halted the trading of its shares on Sept 26 pending the delisting announcement, its shares had been trading at 6.4 Singapore cents. On Tuesday, as trading resumed following the announcement, the shares rose to 6.8 Singapore cents.
The controlling concert group, which directly and indirectly own in aggregate about 54.3 per cent of China New Town, has undertaken not to participate in the selective share buyback. The company said it has also received irrevocable undertakings from shareholders holding in total a stake of about 20.2 per cent.
The delisting proposal is subject to the approval of independent shareholders at an extraordinary general meeting. China New Town said that the SGX has indicated it has no objection to the delisting subject to specified conditions.
It added that the board would in due course appoint an independent financial adviser to advise its independent board committee.
China New Town reversed a year-ago loss to post a net profit of 101 million yuan (S$20.8 million) for the six months ended June 30. This was due to a 99.5 million yuan gain on reorganisation of a joint venture. Six-month revenue grew 83 per cent to 108.6 million yuan.
Net asset value as at end-June was 0.3761 yuan per share, up from the 0.3647 yuan per share balance from six months earlier. Operating cash flow was a positive 311.9 million yuan for the six months ended June, and cash and cash equivalents at mid-year stood at 2.2 billion yuan.
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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Kenneth Lim
19 October 2016
China New Town Development Co is seeking a voluntary delisting from the Singapore Exchange (SGX) to trade only on the Stock Exchange of Hong Kong to save on costs and improve liquidity.
The China-based township developer is making an exit offer of seven Singapore cents a share to Singapore shareholders. Those who prefer to stay invested in the company may arrange to have their shares transferred to Hong Kong.
China New Town says its delisting move in Singapore is not a privatisation exercise as it intends to maintain its Hong Kong primary listing.
The exit offer price is higher than what China New Town's Singapore shareholders have seen in more than a year. The last time the stock traded at seven Singapore cents or higher was on July 27, 2015, according to data from ShareInvestor.com.
When China New Town halted the trading of its shares on Sept 26 pending the delisting announcement, its shares had been trading at 6.4 Singapore cents. On Tuesday, as trading resumed following the announcement, the shares rose to 6.8 Singapore cents.
The controlling concert group, which directly and indirectly own in aggregate about 54.3 per cent of China New Town, has undertaken not to participate in the selective share buyback. The company said it has also received irrevocable undertakings from shareholders holding in total a stake of about 20.2 per cent.
The delisting proposal is subject to the approval of independent shareholders at an extraordinary general meeting. China New Town said that the SGX has indicated it has no objection to the delisting subject to specified conditions.
It added that the board would in due course appoint an independent financial adviser to advise its independent board committee.
China New Town reversed a year-ago loss to post a net profit of 101 million yuan (S$20.8 million) for the six months ended June 30. This was due to a 99.5 million yuan gain on reorganisation of a joint venture. Six-month revenue grew 83 per cent to 108.6 million yuan.
Net asset value as at end-June was 0.3761 yuan per share, up from the 0.3647 yuan per share balance from six months earlier. Operating cash flow was a positive 311.9 million yuan for the six months ended June, and cash and cash equivalents at mid-year stood at 2.2 billion yuan.