Posts

Showing posts from January, 2020

Magnus debacle a grave case of misgovernance

ON Jan 9, Magnus Energy, a company whose shares have been suspended from trading since Aug 23, 2019, got an opportunity for a reboot after minority shareholders voted in a new board. For many Magnus shareholders, this could not have been a better outcome. There have been cases where companies became insolvent and shareholders were trapped in limbo. Had it not been for Charles Madhavan, who had a brief but critical two-month stint as the company's managing director before he was terminated, no one would have been privy to the extent of the shenanigans that contributed to many people losing their investments. In its heyday, Magnus was trading close to S$4 a share in early 2013. That was before the massive fund-raising activities the company undertook from FY2015 to FY2018. In total, Magnus raised gross proceeds of S$31.3 million, and had used close to S$20 million. As a result of a notes issue exercise and share placement, the company issued a significant number of new

SGX RegCo investigating Magnus Energy disposal

It's looking into possible breaches of the Catalist rules after Magnus' sale of interest in firm THE Singapore Exchange's regulatory arm (SGX RegCo) on Friday notified Catalist-listed Magnus Energy Group to put on hold all corporate transactions until its board is fully reconstituted, and said it would investigate a disposal by the firm for possible breaches of the Catalist rules. Magnus Energy is set to convene an extraordinary general meeting (EGM) on Jan 9 as two teams seek shareholders' support for boardroom control of the troubled oil and gas firm. In a Dec 31 update, the firm said that "all planned actions are expected to be taken only after the EGM". But it was brought to the attention of SGX RegCo that the company had sold its 50 per cent indirect interest in Mid-continent Environmental Protection to the latter's existing director, Chong Yen Yee, for RM1 (33 Singapore cents). As the disposal involved negative relative figures unde

John Soh threatened to 'run down' integrity of witnesses, claims former abettor Ken Tai

SINGAPORE (Jan 3): John Soh Chee Wen, the alleged mastermind behind the 2013 penny stock crash, had threatened to “run down the integrity” of witnesses, former abettor-turned-prosecution witness Ken Tai Chee Ming told the court on Friday. Under cross-examination by Soh’s defence counsel N Sreenivasan of K&L Straits Law, Tai disclosed that he did not reveal the involvement of Dick Gwee in the market manipulation to the Commercial Affairs Department (CAD) until 2017 because he wanted to be “fair to John, [Quah] Su-Ling and Dick”. “I initially covered for him because he is old and if he goes in [to prison] again [he will get] a longer sentence,” explained Tai. Tai also repeated his testimony from the last tranche of trial that he was initially willing to take the rap for Soh, but decided against it once Soh “pushed the blame” to him. According to Tai, Soh had also told him that in court, it would be “word against word” and “witness against witness” and that Soh would

Witness Ken Tai admits to cheating alleged masterminds, making millions of dollars in market manipulation scheme

SINGAPORE (Jan 2): Returning to the stand for the third tranche of the trial of alleged 2013 penny stock crash masterminds John Soh Chee Wen and Quah Su-Ling, prosecution witness Ken Tai Chee Ming on Thursday again admitted to cheating the duo and making millions of dollars for himself. Once part of Soh’s “inner circle” of brokers and remisiers, Tai had already admitted to manipulation of the stock market for his own gain in the second tranche of the trial in October last year. However, Tai later claimed he only confessed to make Soh’s lawyer “happy” after a protracted and frustrating back-and-forth questioning. Tai’s cross-examination has been put on hold until this third tranche so the defence counsels had time to go through some data. In his cross-examination on Thursday, Soh’s defence counsel, N Sreenivasan of K&L Straits Law, put forth that Tai had lied at several instances. “You are guilty of market manipulation, misappropriation and cheating your accoun