Latest Forum Topics / Hyflux Last:0.21 -- |
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Hyflux
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FrancisLim
Elite |
22-Sep-2023 10:25
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DBS Bank Ltd. was the Sole Financial Adviser and Issue Manager for the initial public offering of Eagle Hospitality Trust (& ldquo EHT& rdquo ).  Also, the secured syndicated lender and DBS Trustee, the Trustee of the Reit. The Edge - sept 21, 2023 (Quote) Not long after the IPO, various substantial shareholders, including DBS, which arranged the listing, began to cut their respective stakes. This triggered further scrutiny on this counter, made worse by the pandemic that started in early 2020. This then led EHT, controlled by Howard Wu and Taylor Woods, to default on loans totalling some US$341 million. The case is seen as a dent in the reputation of Singapore& rsquo s REITs market, which has gained popularity among investors, and for having attracted overseas assets to list here. In its update, MAS says that it is in the process of reviewing the large amount of documents seized and information obtained in the course of the investigation and has sought advice from industry experts on the EHT case.  (Unquote) Clearly as being the sole financial adviser, arranger and secured lender and Trustee.. it should be held accountable.  It relied on professional advice, then it is for DBS to go after the  advisor.    |
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Joelton
Supreme |
17-Jun-2023 15:14
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Hyflux independent director further charged under Securities and Futures Act
Hyflux independent director Lee Joo Hai is contesting the latest charge, IPC Corporation, of which Lee is an independent director, said in a bourse filing on Friday. 
 
AN INDEPENDENT director of Hyflux, Lee Joo Hai, has been further charged under Section 253 of the Securities and Futures Act, which outlines criminal liability for false or misleading statements.
Lee is being investigated amid potential lapses in disclosures by Hyflux on its Tuaspring Integrated Water and Power Project, and possible accounting irregularities.
Lee is contesting the charge, property company IPC Corporation, of which Lee is an independent director, said in a bourse filing on Friday (Jun 16).
 
In March, he was charged with one count of neglect as an independent director under the Securities and Futures Act, The Business Times reported in May.
His alleged neglect resulted in Hyflux on Mar 7, 2011, intentionally failing to notify the bourse that the Tuaspring project was its expansion into a new business of selling electricity.
The water treatment company also failed to disclose that the plant&rsquo s profitability was contingent on electricity sales revenue, which was projected to make up a significant proportion of its overall revenue.
IPC Corporation on Friday said its business and operations are unaffected by the Hyflux investigation. Its nominating committee has said that the recent charge does not compromise Lee&rsquo s duties, as Lee has conducted himself professionally since his board appointment.
&ldquo Notwithstanding the charge, the nominating committee and the board (both with Mr Lee abstaining) are of the view that the character and integrity of Mr Lee remain suitable for him to continue as director of the company,&rdquo IPC said.
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Joelton
Supreme |
29-Mar-2023 09:53
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Hyflux winds up two units over unpaid debts
HYFLUX Membrane Manufacturing and Hyflux Engineering have been ordered on Tuesday (Mar 28) to be wound up upon a successful application by the now-defunct water treatment firm Hyflux.
 
Tan Kok Quan Partnership, representing Hyflux as the claimant in the winding-up applications, told the High Court that the two Hyflux subsidiaries have not been able to pay the debt it is seeking to recover, without stating the overdue amounts and the circumstances in which these were incurred.
 
Hyflux Membrane Manufacturing and Hyflux Engineering also have current liabilities exceeding current assets, thereby satisfying the cash flow test, the court heard.
 
Justice Aedit Abdullah noted that no one opposed the petitions to wind up the two Hyflux companies.
 
Hyflux, in February, issued notices in the Government Gazette on these applications, informing any creditor or contributory of the company desiring to support or oppose the winding-up attempt to appear at the hearing.
 
Tan Kok Quan Partnership counsel did not want to comment when approached by The Business Times.
 
Hyflux Membrane Manufacturing and Hyflux Engineering were originally part of the Hyflux group of 36 companies that brought legal actions against founder and former chief executive Oliva Lum as well as their former independent auditor KPMG. Of these, 16 companies are already in liquidation and one is under receivership.
 
Ultimately, only Hyflux, Hydrochem and Tuaspring proceeded with the lawsuits as plaintiffs.
 
Hyflux was placed under judicial management in November 2020, and the High Court in July 2021 approved its winding up, after it failed to secure a white knight while under a debt moratorium for almost two years. 
 
Its liquidators declared an interim dividend of 1.568 per cent to all of its unsecured creditors in December 2022 while the dividend rate based on the total nominal value of S$265 million worth of notes was about S$0.01734 per note. The liquidators had received total proof of debt amounting to around S$1.5 billion.
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vicloo
Supreme |
23-Dec-2022 14:12
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Is perpetual security or bond holder receiving this dividend? Since it is unsecured with no collateral too. Anyone know?
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finjungle
Senior |
23-Dec-2022 13:24
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She would probably not get anything big. Just a small tap on her wrist. Come on all of us should know Singapore well enough on such issues! The auditors will go FREE after collecting millions of audit fees! Not to forget that the directors and IDs ( including those who had retired since) who were supposed in law to " guard" the investors were also paid hansomely.  Fellow investors, this is the way the game is played!!!!
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FATABA
Supreme |
23-Dec-2022 10:43
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Honestly so what if you get her to be a bankrupt .....is Hyflux issue going to be resolve and SH get back what they invested ?  Look at the others ....Noble , Midas, Swiber ...etc etc ...ALL THESE are Spore stock LISTED UNDER SGX .....WHAT happened ?  some of them are NOT even caught ? ( enjoying their life somewhere now) ....yet $M are lost by investor who assume SGX will do proper due diligent ( including esp ALL the  auditors who checked yearly on their accounts ? ) ...AUDITOR MUST N SHOULD BE taking a BIGGER responsibilty esp IF THEY HAVE AUDIT THESE COMPANIES ACCT /  why should they be paid ?  The list will go on and on .... unfortunately 
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john_ric
Supreme |
23-Dec-2022 10:35
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Frankly this jinx lum should have been a bankrupt and in jail long ago. | ||||
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Joelton
Supreme |
23-Dec-2022 09:04
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Hyflux sues Olivia Lum for more than S$690 million over alleged negligence, fiduciary duty breach
OLIVIA Lum Ooi Lin has been sued by water treatment firm Hyflux which she had helmed for claims of at least S$690.6 million over alleged negligence and breach of fiduciary duty.
 
Lum has denied the allegations in the defence she filed last week through her lawyers, Davinder Singh and Jaikanth Shankar.
 
Hyflux, Hydrochem and Tuaspring are companies in the group bringing the legal action against the 61-year-old, with the two liquidators for the group joining as plaintiffs. The plaintiffs are represented by Eddee Ng of Tan Kok Quan Partnership.
 
Lum, noted the statement of claim filed in October, controlled the group in her capacity as the executive chairman and chief executive officer during the period that the financial statements were allegedly misstated.
 
Specifically, she had failed to recognise material impairments and provisions in respect of the Tuaspring desalination and power plants, resulting in Hyflux&rsquo s 2011 to 2017 financial statements being grossly overstated and the 2014-2017 statements wrongly prepared on a going concern basis, alleged the five plaintiffs.
 
Such misstatements would have required Lum to make an announcement as soon as practicable to the market and stakeholders on the uncertainty of Hyflux and the group&rsquo s ability to continue as a going concern.
 
Lum had failed to realise that Hyflux and the group, by the time the 2014 financial statements were published, had no realistic alternative but to cease trading or otherwise undertake a drastic restructuring, argued the plaintiffs.
 
Hence, she was said to have led Hyflux, Hydrochem and Tuaspring to be in breach of the prohibitions against wrongful trading, when she should have known these firms would be unable to repay debts and obligations taken on subsequently.
 
She had further allegedly wilfully permitted the loss-making Hyflux to pay out dividends in breach of the Companies Act, which stipulates that dividends must be paid from profits only. The plaintiffs noted: &ldquo If Hyflux&rsquo s financial statements had given a true and fair view of its financial position, Hyflux would not have had sufficient distributable reserves for it to be lawful for it to make any of the dividend payments&hellip &rdquo
 
The plaintiffs are claiming over S$690.6 million from Lum, including S$6.7 million in remuneration, fees and benefits paid to her from 2011 to 2018, S$260.6 million in dividends paid out to shareholders from 2012 to 2018, S$113.6 million in financing costs incurred from 2014 to 2017 on perpetual securities, and S$306.5 million in financing costs incurred from 2012 to 2018 on external borrowings.
 
The plaintiffs are also seeking to recover funding loss incurred during the period when the group continued operating even though it was allegedly already not a going concern, with the quantum of compensation to be assessed.
 
Besides Lum, Hyflux&rsquo s auditor, KPMG, is also facing a S$684.6 million lawsuit from the three Hyflux plaintiffs over alleged negligence in auditing the accounts. The smaller claim does not include the remuneration and benefits paid to Lum.
 
The amount Hyflux manages to claim in these proceedings, the plaintiffs said, will be accounted for so that there is no double recovery.
 
Lum, on the other hand, claimed that the statement of claim was vague and unclear, for example, the use of the terms &ldquo founder&rdquo of Hyflux and &ldquo dominant controller&rdquo within the group to describe her. She acknowledged that as a director of Hyflux, she owed fiduciary and statutory duties to it, but denied she had breached them.
 
The financial statements of Hyflux for FY2011-2017 were prepared by its staff with the relevant accounting expertise and audited by KPMG, as well as reviewed by Hyflux&rsquo s audit committee, Lum noted.
 
She thus believed she was entitled to defer to KPMG and Hyflux&rsquo s staff and audit committee, given that they have the competency and expertise. She also claimed that she had acted in good faith, had made proper inquiry where needed and did not know that such reliance on their input was unwarranted.
 
She noted that KPMG has stood by its audit and maintained that the FY2011-2017 financial statements had no misstatements as alleged by the plaintiffs.
 
She further flagged that claims sought for alleged breaches that took place before March 2016 are time-barred because they fell outside the time limit allowed by law, given that this legal action began in March this year.
 
On the claims that she led Hyflux, Hydrochem and Tuaspring to engage in wrongful trading and in breach of the law by paying dividends despite Hyflux being in the red, Lum criticised these claims of not setting out a reasonable cause of action (the set of facts for making claims), being not sustainable in law, scandalous, frivolous, vexatious and an abuse of process.
 
In any case, she denied that she had caused the losses that the plaintiffs are claiming for, calling their case &ldquo wholly misconceived, based on an entirely artificial and contrived alternative reality and designed to create claims where none exist&rdquo .
 
Lum has separately been charged with three counts of violations of the Securities and Futures Act and the Companies Act.
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Joelton
Supreme |
06-Dec-2022 08:52
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Hyflux&rsquo s unsecured creditors to receive interim dividend around Dec 21
 
Liquidators said last month that unsecured creditors are likely to receive a &ldquo small dividend&rdquo following the sale of assets.
 
SINGAPORE - The liquidators for beleaguered water treatment company Hyflux will be declaring an interim dividend of 1.568 per cent to unsecured creditors of the company on or around Dec 8.
 
The dividend rate based on the total nominal value of the notes is expected to be $0.01734 per note and will be paid on or around Dec 21, the company&rsquo s appointed judicial managers from Kroll said in a bourse filing on Monday.
 
The trustee fees and expenses will be paid in full, and the remaining dividend will be distributed, pari passu (on equal footing, without preference) to all noteholders, the liquidators said.
 
The liquidators had said last month that unsecured creditors, including medium-term noteholders, are likely to receive a &ldquo small dividend&rdquo following the sale of assets.
 
The liquidators said they have received total proof of debt amounting to around $1.5 billion, but the realisations from the asset sales are unlikely to exceed $100 million.
 
The dividend will be credited directly into designated bank accounts for holders who held their notes with the Central Depository. For those who held their notes with depository agents, the dividend will be paid to beneficial owners by the respective depository agent or Central Provident Fund agent bank.
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ysh2006
Supreme |
01-Dec-2022 15:23
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Last time DMX this shares we also cannot finally dropped the cases pay lawyer fees only...
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Joelton
Supreme |
01-Dec-2022 09:57
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Hyflux seeks S$684.6 million from KPMG for alleged negligence
Fundamentally, the plaintiffs&rsquo claim is an impermissible attempt to make the defendant underwrite the plaintiffs&rsquo own business failures, auditor says
 
KPMG has refuted the allegations of it being negligent, and argued in the defence filed last week that the obligation to prepare the financial statements in compliance with the law and reporting standards lies with the plaintiffs&rsquo management and board. 
HYFLUX : 600 0% and two of its units are claiming over S$684.6 million from the group&rsquo s former external auditor, KPMG, for alleged negligence in auditing the accounts.
 
The professional services firm has denied the allegation.
 
According to the statement of claim filed in October, Hyflux, Hydrochem and Tuaspring alleged that Hyflux&rsquo s financial statements for the years 2011 to 2017 in relation to the Tuaspring desalination and power plants were materially misstated.
 
This was because Hyflux had failed to recognise provisions and impairment losses in accordance with financial reporting standards.
 
Hyflux would not have prepared its financial statements on a going concern basis from 2014 onwards had the misstatements been recognised, charged the plaintiffs.
 
The plaintiffs said that the desalination plant and the power plant should have been assessed separately for provisions and impairment purposes. In doing so, the embattled Hyflux should have recognised a provision in its 2011 to 2017 financial statements, as well as an impairment in its 2013 to 2017 financial statements.
 
If a joint assessment was done, Hyflux should have recognised significant impairments for at least its 2014 to 2017 financial statements.
 
That would have led Hyflux to post a loss in its income statement, said the plaintiffs.
 
Also, the plaintiffs alleged that KPMG did not obtain sufficient appropriate audit evidence on whether the cash flow analysis Hyflux performed for the Tuaspring project was reasonable, as well as whether the going concern assumption was appropriate.
 
KPMG should have realised that Hyflux needed to inform the market and lenders of the significant provisions, impairment losses and operating cash losses. The announcement of which would have caused the share price of Hyflux to be significantly impacted, thereby making it difficult to raise further funds by debt or equity. It would then not have been able to continue trading and incurred further losses.
 
The plaintiffs are therefore asking KPMG for reimbursements of S$684.6 million, which include the dividends paid out to shareholders from 2012 to 2018, and discretionary bonuses paid to directors and senior management.
 
They are also seeking funding loss incurred during the period when the group continued operating even though it was already not a going concern, with the quantum of compensation to be assessed.
 
The plaintiffs said in the statement of claim: &ldquo The central purpose of a statutory audit is to provide the audited entity and its shareholders with information about the company&rsquo s true and fair financial position on which to base management and governance decisions. All of the losses claimed flow directly from KPMG&rsquo s failure to discharge its duties with regard to the information provided to the plaintiffs and Hyflux&rsquo s shareholders.&rdquo
 
Hyflux and Hydrochem are in compulsory liquidation while Tuaspring is under receivership to realise the security with the sale proceeds to be used to repay debt. This lawsuit is believed to be funded by third-party financiers.
 
KPMG refuted the allegations of it being negligent, and argued in the defence filed last week that the obligation to prepare the financial statements in compliance with the law and reporting standards lies with the plaintiffs&rsquo management and board.
 
Hyflux group&rsquo s financial statements, KPMG claimed, were audited in accordance with auditing standards and there were no material misstatements. Where judgment calls were required by the auditor, they had conformed with the standards. Therefore, if any judgment was incorrect, it is not an indication of misconduct or negligence.
 
As at the date of the signing of the FY 2017 audited financial statements in March 2018, KPMG noted, there were no creditors making unexpected demand for payments. It pinned the plight of Hyflux on its seeking moratorium, sparking a crisis of trust and confidence among their stakeholders, when it should have negotiated for standstills or for payment of liabilities to be deferred.
 
&ldquo The manner and delay in which the plaintiffs tried to restructure themselves was a self-inflicted injury. Otherwise, they would have been able to continue as a going concern, and benefit from the uniform Singapore energy price improving in 2021 and 2022,&rdquo KPMG said.
 
The audit report was solely for the use and benefit of the members of Hyflux, and not expected to be relied on by others or for specific transaction, the plaintiffs were also reminded.
 
And there are limitations on the auditor&rsquo s ability to detect material misstatements, thus no questioning in the audit report of the entity&rsquo s ability to continue as a going concern is not a guarantee that the entity&rsquo s going concern status is not at risk.
 
There is no causal link between the alleged breaches and the claims being sought by the plaintiffs, KPMG also said, pointing out that, for instance, dividend decisions were made by the plaintiffs&rsquo management and board.
 
&ldquo Fundamentally, the plaintiffs&rsquo claim is an impermissible attempt to make the defendant underwrite the plaintiffs&rsquo own business failures,&rdquo KPMG argued.
 
Noted as well that this case was filed in March, KPMG contended that all claims arising from events before March 2016 fall outside the time limit allowed by law.
 
The plaintiffs are represented by Tan Kok Quan Partnership&rsquo s Eddee Ng, while KPMG is defended by TSMP Law&rsquo s Thio Shen Yi and Felicia Tan.
 
Hyflux has filed a lawsuit against Olivia Lum as well, but her defence is pending.
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Joelton
Supreme |
28-Nov-2022 11:08
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Hyflux criminal charges: Investors won&rsquo t be made whole, but may feel sense of justice being done
Investigating potential wrongdoing at an earlier stage, combined with tough action, could help maintain market confidence
 
LESS than three months after it became clear that nobody responsible for Noble Group&rsquo s &ldquo incorrect accounting&rdquo will face serious consequences, the authorities appear to be taking a tough line on alleged disclosure breaches by Hyflux before the water treatment company ran into financial trouble.
 
On Nov 17, former Hyflux chief executive Olivia Lum, the company&rsquo s former chief financial officer, and four independent directors were charged in court for their various roles in the company&rsquo s intentional failure to make required disclosures relating to the Tuaspring Integrated Water and Power Project back in 2011.
 
Lum was also charged for failing to ensure Hyflux disclosed in its financial statements for 2017 a breach of a loan agreement by a subsidiary involved in a desalination water project in Oman that permitted the lenders to demand accelerated repayment.
 
The charges came after investigations carried out by the Commercial Affairs Department (CAD) of the Singapore Police Force, the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) and the Accounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority (Acra).
 
If convicted, Lum and her former colleagues could face severe penalties. Each charge of failing to disclose information on Tuaspring as required under the Singapore Exchange listing rules could mean imprisonment of up to seven years, a fine not exceeding S$250,000, or both.
 
This contrasts sharply with the Noble case, where the group&rsquo s former officials faced no criminal charges after investigations by CAD, MAS and Acra.
 
On Aug 24, the authorities said MAS would impose a civil penalty of S$12.6 million on Noble for publishing misleading information in its financial statements and that Acra would issue &ldquo stern warnings&rdquo to two former directors of a unit of Noble for failing to prepare and table annual financial statements in compliance with Singapore&rsquo s accounting standards.
 
Much like the Noble case, however, the authorities didn&rsquo t commence investigations into Hyflux until much of its value was already lost.
 
Fall of Hyflux
The disclosure breaches related to Tuaspring, as I understand, have to do with Hyflux not stating from the outset that the project marked the group&rsquo s entry into the new field of selling electricity, and that the profitability of the project hinged on the sale of electricity.
 
Hyflux announced that it had been named the preferred bidder by the Public Utilities Board (PUB) for the Tuaspring project on Mar 7, 2011. The company said at the time that the S$890 million project (later revised to more than S$1 billion) would include a desalination water plant and a combined cycle gas turbine power plant.
 
Hyflux stated that the purpose of the power plant was to supply electricity to the desalination plant, and that excess power would be sold to the power grid.
 
Shortly after announcing this landmark project, on Apr 13, 2011, Hyflux said it would raise S$200 million through the issue of cumulative, non-convertible, non-voting perpetual Class A preference shares. The proceeds were to fund the group&rsquo s water and infrastructure projects.
 
The new securities carried a dividend rate of 6 per cent per annum, and were redeemable at the option of Hyflux on or after Apr 25, 2018. If they were not redeemed on Apr 25, 2018, the dividend rate would step up to 8 per cent per annum.
 
Hyflux eventually doubled the size of the preference share issue to S$400 million, to meet very strong demand from investors.
 
Fast-forward to 2016 and the excitement about the Tuaspring project was quickly turning to despair. The Tuaspring power plant commenced commercial operations that year, and immediately began weighing on Hyflux&rsquo s profitability.
 
Hyflux reported a 91 per cent plunge in earnings for 2016 to S$4.8 million (subsequently restated to S$3.8 million). It attributed this to weaker-than-expected electricity prices. Excluding the losses at Tuaspring, the group would have chalked up earnings of S$118.3 million.
 
Hyflux&rsquo s financial performance worsened the following year. For 2017, it reported a loss of S$116.4 million &ndash and it wasn&rsquo t entirely attributable to Tuaspring. Even excluding this key asset, Hyflux recorded a loss of S$34.5 million.
 
Hyflux also said then it would not redeem the preference shares in April 2018.
 
Things quickly went south from that point. On May 22, 2018, Hyflux said it would begin a court-supervised reorganisation and suspended trading of its shares. Various strategic investors expressed interest, but the proposed deals fell through.
 
It did not help that PUB terminated its water purchase agreement with Tuaspring in May 2019, and took over the desalination plant to safeguard Singapore&rsquo s water security. Malaysia&rsquo s YTL Power International said earlier this year it had purchased the Tuaspring power plant for S$270 million.
 
Proactive regulation needed
The criminal charges that have been brought against Lum and her former colleagues will not make investors whole. Hyflux went into liquidation last year expecting to realise only about S$100 million from asset sales, versus proofs of debt totalling S$1.5 billion.
 
But some investors will probably feel justice is now in the process of being done &ndash at least, more so than in the case of Noble.
 
Whether the criminal charges make investors safer and boards more mindful of their disclosure obligations is another matter.
 
CAD, MAS and Acra announced the start of their joint investigation into Hyflux on Jun 2, 2020. They said at the time that a review of Hyflux&rsquo s disclosures and compliance with accounting and auditing standards, which began on Apr 16, 2019, had given them reason to suspect offences may have been committed.
 
This was several months after Hyflux began its court-supervised reorganisation and suspended trading of its shares.
 
On the face of it, the directors&rsquo various alleged offences might not have drawn the attention of the authorities if electricity prices had not slumped when the Tuaspring power plant began operations.
 
To be clear, I am not suggesting Lum and her former colleagues are being made scapegoats for Hyflux&rsquo s losses in the face of an unfortunate market development. Corporate boards should be held responsible for timely disclosures of material information regardless of business conditions.
 
Yet, the authorities should perhaps be more alive to signals from the market. In the Noble case, investigations only began in late 2018 &ndash more than three years after Iceberg Research began raising concerns about the commodity supplier&rsquo s financial statements.
 
In the Hyflux case, signs that the water treatment group&rsquo s foray into power generation had gone awry were evident from H1 2016.
 
Investigating potential wrongdoing more proactively might not ultimately save investors from losing money on the likes of Noble or Hyflux. But it might help prevent investors from losing confidence in the local market.
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ysh2006
Supreme |
21-Nov-2022 17:25
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She and the team got very good lawyers group to fight very difficult to make them guilty ! even though some fault maybe only small fine lah...Everybody know investment got risk. You see any body got charge in the US reit EHT or Lehman Brothers case ?.... | ||||
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Johnsnow
Master |
19-Nov-2022 14:46
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This woman also a member of the rock church at buona vista not sure she donate alot to this church monthly, if not this church how to afford to buy property assets . Will there be law to punish her? If she caught wrong doing | ||||
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newbie19
Supreme |
19-Nov-2022 13:21
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uiop1223
Supreme |
19-Nov-2022 12:51
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Alot of fools around. Plenty can be found in SCM.
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ysh2006
Supreme |
19-Nov-2022 10:30
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At least support Best World still got hope to relished again...
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investshare
Supreme |
19-Nov-2022 08:57
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If you look at Hyflux financial results few years before the collapse, it was already obvious then that the company would not survive. I remember many raised red flags in this thread. But the hardcore supporters still support Olivia and told others that this was a good company. Indeed other than Olivia, these shareholders are to be blamed.
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lukewong82
Master |
19-Nov-2022 07:17
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dun blame the rich and powerful? then blame ourselves for being stupid?
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ysh2006
Supreme |
19-Nov-2022 04:44
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She is on bail and free to go back home for $100k awaiting for further development of the cases. | ||||
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