Seems very illiquid
Kori Holdings unit wins two contracts worth S$52.3m
KORI Holdings said on Monday that its subsidiary Kori Construction snagged two contracts in two projects, amounting to S$52.3 million between May and June this year.
 
One project is awarded by Samsung C& T Corporation to supply and install temporary steel works for the design and construction of a tunnel between Novena Rise and Toa Payoh Rise for the North-South Corridor.
 
The other is awarded by the Hwa Seng-Chye Joo-Ho Lee joint venture to supply, install, dismantle and buy back steel struts and walers for the design and construction of a tunnel between Pemimpin Place and Sin Ming Avenue, also for the North-South Corridor.
 
Said Hooi Yu Koh, executive chairman and chief executive officer of Kori Holdings: " We are pleased to have been awarded these contracts for the North-South Corridor. This not only affirms our long-standing proven track record established over the years, but also signifies the trust and confidence that our customers and partners have in us."
 
Kori was awarded six contracts between September 2020 and January 2021. With the addition of these two contracts, it has clinched a total of S$133.5 million in contracts since last September.
Kori Holdings unit wins two contracts worth S$52.3m
Kori Holdings said on Monday that its subsidiary Kori Construction snagged two contracts in two projects, amounting to S$52.3 million between May and June this year.One project is awarded by Samsung C& T Corporation to supply and install temporary steel works for the design and construction of a tunnel between Novena Rise and Toa Payoh Rise for the North-South Corridor.
The other is awarded by the Hwa Seng-Chye Joo-Ho Lee joint venture to supply, install, dismantle and buy back steel struts and walers for the design and construction of a tunnel between Pemimpin Place and Sin Ming Avenue, also for the North-South Corridor.
Said Hooi Yu Koh, executive chairman and chief executive officer of Kori Holdings: " We are pleased to have been awarded these contracts for the North-South Corridor. This not only affirms our long-standing proven track record established over the years, but also signifies the trust and confidence that our customers and partners have in us."
Kori was awarded six contracts between September 2020 and January 2021. With the addition of these two contracts, it has clinched a total of S$133.5 million in contracts since last September.
 
Kori aims to stay steely in face of rising material cost, labour strain
The Catalist-listed specialist builder is engaging in R& D efforts to improve long-term productivity.
 
LABOUR crunches and spiking steel prices are among the challenges facing specialist builder Kori Holdings this year.
 
But its chief executive Hooi Yu Koh believes that the 39-year-old company can power through with a fresh crop of contracts. Rather than diversify, as some of his peers have done, he is betting on R& D efforts to improve productivity.
 
He remains confident that Kori, which listed on the Catalist in 2012, can continue to retain an edge in public infrastructure projects. More of such projects can be expected following initiatives announced in this year' s Budget.
 
Speaking to The Business Times at his Sims Drive office, Mr Hooi said the Covid-19 pandemic has had a significant impact on the supply of foreign labour.
 
" When the ' Circuit Breaker' kicked in and the entire industry went into a standstill, followed by the dormitories having infections, that hit us pretty badly. We ceased operations and our income was down to a minimal level. It was the Jobs Support Scheme that allowed us to (get) through," he said, in reference to the government' s wage subsidy measures.
 
Even after the Circuit Breaker was lifted on June 1 last year, Kori could not restart work proper because of the " rampant" Covid-19 infections in foreign worker dormitories.
 
" Without workers, we cannot perform. That period was like (another) Circuit Breaker, where the expectation was to start but we couldn' t. Those two months, June and July, were a period where our employees were worried about how long this would take."
 
Kori' s financial performance for H1 FY2020 reflects some of the impact, although the full extent is yet to be seen. For the half-year ended June, the firm posted S$83,000 in net profit, down 22 per cent from a year ago. Its revenue fell 30 per cent year-on-year to S$6.1 million.
 
Mr Hooi said the labour crunch has eased since August, and Kori gradually resumed works while clinching new contracts.
 
As at Jan 4, it has bagged three projects worth S$81.2 million: two involving the North South Corridor tunnel and the other for the new Mandai eco-resort.
 
Steel spike
 
Even as labour conditions have normalised, however, Kori now has to deal with a spike in steel prices due to resurgent demand for the material as construction works resume globally. Kori' s key segments are steel works and tunnelling.
 
Mr Hooi estimates that the price for steel materials have increased by between 10 and 20 per cent in the past two months.
 
" From January to November 2020, the prices were pretty stagnant because there was no demand. It picked up some time in late November, and in this period of about two months it is really shooting up," he said.
 
He believes the price will gradually stabilise, especially as more steel mills resume operations at higher capacity and export more of the material. As a firm that also leases out steel beams, Kori is also partly protected, he added.
 
" The good thing for us is that when we buy steel materials, we sell them to clients and then buy them back for reuse &hellip So we are not that much affected by this increase because we sell high and buy back high we don' t face a severe impact," Mr Hooi said.
 
While Kori will need to add on new steel inventory this year, he said the company' s requirements are not that high now. This gives it some time to observe how steel prices move. He is also keeping a close watch on other construction material prices, which have also gone up.
 
Future sustainability
 
Beyond immediate concerns about labour and input costs, Mr Hooi said the pandemic has necessitated some " soul-searching" in terms of corporate strategy.
 
With Singapore actively looking to reduce its reliance on low-wage foreign labour, construction players such as Kori face tough questions about the future of their business.
 
While automation is the long-term solution, Mr Hooi said technology adoption has not caught up.
 
" The construction industry is still a bit conservative, in the sense that a lot of works are a bit difficult to carry out without some component or input of manual labour," he said.
 
" If you need to do a casting on site, without labour, there is no way to pour the concrete in its designated location. Robotics has not gone to a level where it can replace the ability of humans to do manual labour for the time being."
 
To mitigate this, Kori is looking into how it can improve productivity to reduce its labour reliance.
 
One example is its development of a traffic diversion deck made of precast concrete. Such decks are laid over roads where there are construction works, to enable traffic flow. They are typically made of steel.
 
Precast concrete is a significant step away from Kori' s long-held expertise in steel. The material is also slightly more expensive.
 
But the precast decks use only one-sixth the resources that the traditional decks require, Mr Hooi said.
 
" That is the whole beauty of precasting. You just fit (the deck) in like ' Lego' and it is much wider," he added.
 
But in the near to mid term, Kori will still require a substantial foreign labour pool. The company is currently recruiting tunnelling crew members from Thailand, as workers there are especially familiar with such specialised works and have experience working abroad.
 
Looking into the long term, Kori faces the question of whether it should remain a specialist builder. Not only is labour tight, but competition is rising as well with foreign construction firms entering the Singapore market.
 
Kori' s share price reflects the soft sentiment in the construction industry over the years, having fallen from a high of over S$0.50 in 2013 to S$0.15 as at Feb 19.
 
Its revenue has been on the downtrend since 2017, after the construction industry' s heyday back in 2014.
 
More investments
 
But Mr Hooi said Kori is still able to leverage its track record to clinch projects, and points to this year' s Budget as evidence of more investments to come.
 
" Significantly, the announcement of green bonds on select public infrastructure projects is greatly welcomed as this provides us the confidence that public sector infrastructure development continues to anchor our industry in the future economy," he said.
 
The company has thought about other business opportunities such as property development, but there are no concrete plans for now.
 
When asked what type of development could be of interest to Kori, Mr Hooi said: " It' s hard to say. The better option would be if it taps our expertise, like if the development requires underground carparks. This may be beneficial for our core business."
 
He also hopes the lessons from the Covid-19 crisis are not wasted: " This situation can' t last. We have to pick up all the fine learning points, adapt, and ensure we carry forward high productivity after the pandemic is over."
Kori Holdings unit bags S$81.2m in six contracts
CONSTRUCTION services firm Kori Holdings on Monday announced that its subsidiary, Kori Construction, has clinched six contracts in three projects worth an aggregate of S$81.2 million between September 2020 and January 2021.
 
In a bourse filling, the Catalist-listed group said one of the projects, awarded by the Singapore branch of China Railway First Group Co, is for strutting works and sheet piling works at the North-South Corridor (Tunnel) between Marymount Lane and Pemimpin Place.
 
The contract for strutting works has the largest value, and is scheduled to be completed in 60 months from its commencement in the first quarter of 2021, said the group.
 
The second project was awarded by Shanghai Tunnel Engineering Co (Singapore) for tunnel strutting works as well as Kallang River strutting works at the North-South Corridor (Tunnel) between Sin Ming Avenue and Ang Mo Kio Avenue 3.
The third project, awarded by Lum Chang Building Contractors, is for Mandai strutting works and sheet pile works at Mandai Lake Road.
 
Hooi Yu Koh, executive chairman and CEO of Kori Holdings, said: " We are pleased to have been awarded these projects for the various strutting, decking and sheet piling works. This affirms our long-standing proven track record we have established over the years. It also signifies the trust and confidence that our customers and partners have in us."
 
The projects are expected to have a positive impact on the group' s earnings per share and/or net tangible assets per share of the group for the financial year ending Dec 31, 2021.
Going up with Yongnam leading the way...
With attention  of Yongnam diverted towards  the Myanmar airport project, Kori may stand to gain... Just theorizing.
*vested*
Last:0.51     Vol:479k    
+0.005
slow n steady rise in price
Last:0.505     Vol:90k -
fundamentally better than yongnam as iteriated in the earlier post.. gd luck DYODD
Last:0.495     Vol:2553k    
+0.005
Time: 9:48AM
Exchange: SGX
Stock: Kori(5VC)
Signal: Resistance - Breakout with High Volume
ozone2002 ( Date: 29-Jul-2013 09:42) Posted:
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Last:0.495     Vol:453k    
+0.015
silent mover
Time: 9:02AM
Exchange: SGX
Stock: Kori(5VC)
Signal: Bullish MACD Crossover
Last Done: $0.48
Exchange: SGX
Stock: Kori(5VC)
Signal: Bullish MACD Crossover
Last Done: $0.48
Last:0.465     Vol:207k    
+0.015
yongnam up..kori also follow suit
Time: 3:46PM
Exchange: SGX
Stock: Kori(5VC)
Signal: Resistance - Breakout with High Volume
Last Done: $0.455
2 million shares done.. looking gd
gd luck dyodd
Phew... Fast break up but fast down... Not much support.
novice_trader ( Date: 19-Aug-2013 14:09) Posted:
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Time: 10:01AM
Exchange: SGX
Stock: Kori(5VC)
Signal: Support - Broken with High Volume
Last Done: $0.445
so fast reveresal..
Time: 9:06AM
Exchange: SGX
Stock: Kori(5VC)
Signal: Resistance - Breakout with High Volume
Last Done: $0.475
Exchange: SGX
Stock: Kori(5VC)
Signal: Resistance - Breakout with High Volume
Last Done: $0.475
ozone2002 ( Date: 21-Aug-2013 09:07) Posted:
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Last:0.47     Vol:1255k    
+0.01
effect after announcement
Catalist-listed Kori Holdings Limited announced that it has entered into a convertible bond subscription agreement with Keong Hong Holdings Limited, which is also listed on the Catalist board. Keong Hong has agreed to subscribe for a convertible bond with a principal amount of S$5.0 million at an interest rate of 5 per cent per annum. The bond is due to mature in 2016. The bond may be converted into ordinary shares in the capital of Kori at a price of S$0.42 per conversion share, which represents a discount of 9.77 per cent to the volume-weighted average price of S$0.4655 for trades done on the SGX from August 16 to 19. The number of conversion shares that can be issued on conversion of the bond is 11,904,000 and will be admitted to listing on Catalist. ?Keong Hong Holdings Limited is in a business akin to ours and we view that there will be potential synergies between the two companies in the future. With the proceeds from the issuance of the convertible bond, we will be able to acquire companies of a similar trade as part of our expansion plan,? said Mr Hooi Yu Koh, CEO and Managing Director of Kori. (Closing price: S$0.46, -2.128%)
Pending release of an announcement.
The Company was listed on Catalist of the Singapore Exchange Securities Trading Limited (the " SGX-ST" ) on 11 December 2012. The initial public offering of the Company was sponsored by PrimePartners Corporate Finance Pte. Ltd. (the " Sponsor).
This announcement has been prepared by the Company and its contents have been reviewed by the Sponsor for compliance with the relevant rules of the SGX-ST. The Sponsor has not independently verified the contents of this announcement.
This announcement has not been examined or approved by the SGX-ST and the SGX-ST assumes no responsibility for the contents of this announcement including the correctness of any of the statements or opinions made or reports contained in this announcement.
The contact person for the Sponsor is Mr Mark Liew, Managing Director, Corporate Finance, at 20 Cecil Street #21-02 Equity Plaza, Singapore 049705, telephone (65) 6229 8088.
The Company was listed on Catalist of the Singapore Exchange Securities Trading Limited (the " SGX-ST" ) on 11 December 2012. The initial public offering of the Company was sponsored by PrimePartners Corporate Finance Pte. Ltd. (the " Sponsor).
This announcement has been prepared by the Company and its contents have been reviewed by the Sponsor for compliance with the relevant rules of the SGX-ST. The Sponsor has not independently verified the contents of this announcement.
This announcement has not been examined or approved by the SGX-ST and the SGX-ST assumes no responsibility for the contents of this announcement including the correctness of any of the statements or opinions made or reports contained in this announcement.
The contact person for the Sponsor is Mr Mark Liew, Managing Director, Corporate Finance, at 20 Cecil Street #21-02 Equity Plaza, Singapore 049705, telephone (65) 6229 8088.
Is the Halt for good news announcement? I just sold all today... Zzzzzz