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Japfa IPO 15 August

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Smarty
    27-Feb-2025 20:15  
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Never even hit 0.62 offer price.
 
 
halleluyah
    27-Feb-2025 19:26  
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U mean sales of austasia shares $

john8758      ( Date: 27-Feb-2025 19:24) Posted:

Japfa how long can return money ???

 
 
john8758
    27-Feb-2025 19:24  
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Japfa how long can return money ???
 

 
Cadence88
    05-Feb-2025 09:06  
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WHy would it ? The offeror is the founder family. And avian flu is now part & parcel of this cyclical biz.

ozone2002      ( Date: 05-Feb-2025 00:31) Posted:

Will this shake the confidence in the take over of Japfa?

https://www.nippon.com/en/japan-data/h02284/

 
 
ozone2002
    05-Feb-2025 00:31  
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Will this shake the confidence in the take over of Japfa?

https://www.nippon.com/en/japan-data/h02284/
 
 
Smarty
    04-Feb-2025 10:16  
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Wah massive selling @.61
 

 
halleluyah
    31-Jan-2025 11:48  
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yeah, Not selling....wat happen to our austasia shares?? isn" t coy going to sell fr us n given us the $$$ ?? din received anything

beng1102      ( Date: 31-Jan-2025 11:29) Posted:

Now they want our shares.    Don' t sell to them and they would have to raise the offer.

Smarty      ( Date: 28-Jan-2025 15:21) Posted:

Still holding.
But if no better offer may have to sell below offer price 


 
 
beng1102
    31-Jan-2025 11:29  
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Now they want our shares.    Don' t sell to them and they would have to raise the offer.

Smarty      ( Date: 28-Jan-2025 15:21) Posted:

Still holding.
But if no better offer may have to sell below offer price 

 
 
Smarty
    28-Jan-2025 15:21  
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Still holding.
But if no better offer may have to sell below offer price 
 
 
Joelton
    28-Jan-2025 14:58  
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Japfa surges 16% to S$0.615 after news of S$0.62 privatisation offer
The company announced on Friday that members of its founding family were making a joint offer to acquire around 18.3% of the company&rsquo s total issued shares
 
SHARES of agri-food company Japfa : UD2 +16.04% soared on Monday (Jan 27) after news broke on Friday that family members of its founder have offered to take the company private at an offer price of S$0.62 apiece. 
 
It soared S$0.085 or 16 per cent to S$0.615 after the market opened, above its previous closing price of S$0.53 on Friday. 
 
It later eased to S$0.61 at 9.39 am, 15.1 per cent or S$0.08 above Friday&rsquo s closing price, with 3.1 million shares changing hands. 
 
On Friday, Japfa announced in a bourse filing that Renaldo and Gabriella Santosa, as well as Rachel Anastasia Kolonas, were making a joint offer to acquire around 18.3 per cent of the company&rsquo s total issued shares. 
 
The two Santosas, who are siblings, are children of the late Handojo Santosa &ndash Japfa&rsquo s former executive chairman and son of the company&rsquo s founder, the late Ferry Teguh Santosa. Kolonas is the daughter of Japfa&rsquo s non-executive director Hendrick Kolonas, who is the uncle of the two Santosa siblings. 
 
The company said the offer presents an opportunity for shareholders to realise their investments at a premium to prevailing market prices, which might otherwise be unlikely given the shares&rsquo &ldquo low trading liquidity&rdquo . 
 
It added that the move is set to give the offerors and the company&rsquo s management greater flexibility to manage and grow the existing business by allowing the company to pursue &ldquo longer-term business strategies&rdquo that could &ldquo otherwise contrast or conflict with the shorter-term expectations of the public market&rdquo .  
 
 

 
Joelton
    27-Jan-2025 19:54  
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Two more SGX delistings expected as SLB Development, Japfa receive privatisation offers
 
Two more companies could delist from the Singapore Exchange.
The announcements by SLB Development and Japfa come at a time when SGX is almost halfway through a 12-month review to revive trading and draw more listings.
 
SINGAPORE &ndash Two more companies, property developer SLB Development and agri-food business Japfa, may be delisting from the Singapore Exchange (SGX) after receiving privatisation offers from their major shareholders.
 
The moves potentially extend a slew of SGX delistings that took place in 2024, which included Silverlake Axis, Best World International and Isetan Singapore.
 
The announcements also come at a time when the local bourse is almost halfway through a 12-month central bank-led review to revive trading and draw more listings.
 
Construction company Lian Beng Group announced after the market closed on Jan 24 that it is offering 23 cents in cash per share to privatise its subsidiary SLB Development at a premium over SLB&rsquo s closing price of 17 cents.
 
The offer price is also approximately 16.8 per cent over SLB&rsquo s net asset value per share of 19.7 cents as at Nov 30, 2024.
 
SLB was listed on the Catalist board of the SGX on April 20, 2018.
 
Lian Beng currently holds about 708.5 million shares in SLB, representing about 77.6 per cent of the total number of issued shares.
realise their entire cash investment at a premium over historically traded prices without incurring brokerage and other trading costs. 
 
Lian Beng added that the trading volume of SLB&rsquo s shares has &ldquo been generally low&rdquo over the past year, and that delisting will help it save on expenses and costs relating to the maintenance of a listed status and channel resources into business operations.
 
Lian Beng itself was privatised in 2024 by its chairman Ong Pang Aik and his family, through investment holding company OSC Capital, at 68 cents a share.
 
Separately, agri-food company Japfa also announced after the market closed on Jan 24 that it has received an offer from the family members of its founder to take it private at 62 cents per share. They own around 75 per cent of the shares.
 
Japfa, which runs chicken and pig farms in Indonesia and Vietnam, closed at 53 cents on Jan 24. The offer price also represents a premium over Japfa&rsquo s share price over the past four years, when the shares swung between 18 cents and 93 cents. Japfa was listed in 2014 at 80 cents.
 
The joint offerors &ndash Mr Renaldo Santosa and Ms Gabriella Santosa, through their special purpose vehicle TAC 1 and Ms Rachel Anastasia Kolonas, through TAC 2 &ndash are looking to acquire around 18.3 per cent of the total issued shares of Japfa, the company said on Jan 24.
 
The two Santosas are siblings, while Ms Kolonas is their cousin. The Santosa siblings are children of the late Mr Handojo Santosa, Japfa&rsquo s former executive chairman, who was also the son of the late Mr Ferry Teguh Santosa, who founded Japfa.
 
The offer is an opportunity for shareholders to realise their investment in the company at a premium to prevailing market prices, &ldquo which may otherwise be difficult due to the low trading liquidity of the shares&rdquo , the company said.
 
Japfa added that the move is expected to provide the offerors and the company&rsquo s management with greater flexibility to manage and grow the existing business.
 
&ldquo This will allow the company to pursue longer-term business strategies that may otherwise contrast or conflict with the shorter-term expectations of the public market.&rdquo
 
The privatisation offers, if they succeed, follow a slew of delistings from the SGX in 2024 &ndash a total of 17 companies left the exchange compared with just four initial public offerings.
 
In August 2024, a review group led by Second Minister for Finance Chee Hong Tat, who is also deputy chairman of the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS), was set up to explore ways to revive trading and attract more companies to list on the SGX.
 
The group was given 12 months to produce a report.
 
At a Jan 2 event marking the first day of trading in 2025 and the 25th anniversary of the SGX, Deputy Prime Minister and MAS chairman Gan Kim Yong noted that the review group will focus on addressing three issues to rejuvenate the stock market.
 
These include better defining the profile of companies that Singapore wants to attract, such as real estate investment trusts, or Reits, as well as growth companies from Singapore and emerging markets.
 
The group will also work on broadening liquidity in the stock market beyond well-known counters, such as Singapore Airlines and the three local banks, to smaller stocks with market capitalisations between $500 million and $3 billion.
 
Efforts will also be made to draw more capital from institutional and individual investors, and family offices, DPM Gan, who is also Minister for Trade and Industry, said.
 
With increasing calls for Singapore&rsquo s investment company Temasek and sovereign wealth fund GIC to invest more actively in the SGX, DPM Gan also noted that &ldquo it is not practical to rely on sovereign monies alone to sustain these funds and to support the equity market&rdquo .
 
Finally, there will be a review of the SGX regulatory framework to ensure that &ldquo we do not impose unnecessary friction, but empower good companies to list, and enable consumers to make informed investment decisions&rdquo , DPM Gan said.
 
At a Jan 22 seminar, Mr Tan Boon Gin, chief executive of SGX Regulation, also told his audience that a review of the regulator&rsquo s trading and public query regime will be conducted in 2025 &ldquo to see if we have been applying that materiality principle consistently&rdquo .
 
 
Smarty
    27-Jan-2025 15:15  
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So looks like 0.62 will not be done
if holders continue to sell at 0.61
 
 
nqing87
    27-Jan-2025 12:44  
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At least they are kind to put the big sell queue at 61.. they could have put it lower and still there will be people selling to them.. 6million shares at 0.5 cents savings is still 30k.. can feed few employees of the monthly salary.. businessman are calculative and they arent opening charity, else they would have offer much higher, and they had tried to shortchanged small shareholders by trying to buy some shares from them at 35cents earlier..

Caesar      ( Date: 27-Jan-2025 10:12) Posted:

Maybe they are not allowed to do that? Anyway, since they offered to buy at 62, they are unlikely to be so calculative ... the savings of $0.005 is probably peanuts to them ...

Smarty      ( Date: 27-Jan-2025 10:00) Posted:

Why the offerer don' t scoop up all 0.615 sellers?


 
 
halleluyah
    27-Jan-2025 10:53  
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am holding....expect coming results will b gd......

beng1102      ( Date: 27-Jan-2025 10:13) Posted:

Don' t sell back to them.  Very cunning!  IPO at 80cents and privatize at 62cents.   

wehuattogether88      ( Date: 27-Jan-2025 09:46) Posted:

Might go higher if they don?t meet the 90% threshold


 
 
All_Will_Win
    27-Jan-2025 10:31  
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Definitely possible like suntec reit also raise offer price 💪

wehuattogether88      ( Date: 27-Jan-2025 09:46) Posted:

Might go higher if they don?t meet the 90% threshold

 

 
beng1102
    27-Jan-2025 10:13  
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Don' t sell back to them.  Very cunning!  IPO at 80cents and privatize at 62cents.   

wehuattogether88      ( Date: 27-Jan-2025 09:46) Posted:

Might go higher if they don?t meet the 90% threshold

 
 
Caesar
    27-Jan-2025 10:12  
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Maybe they are not allowed to do that? Anyway, since they offered to buy at 62, they are unlikely to be so calculative ... the savings of $0.005 is probably peanuts to them ...

Smarty      ( Date: 27-Jan-2025 10:00) Posted:

Why the offerer don' t scoop up all 0.615 sellers?

 
 
Smarty
    27-Jan-2025 10:00  
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Why the offerer don' t scoop up all 0.615 sellers?
 
 
upupaway
    27-Jan-2025 09:50  
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Not sure how far away are they from 90 percent

wehuattogether88      ( Date: 27-Jan-2025 09:46) Posted:

Might go higher if they don?t meet the 90% threshold

 
 
wehuattogether88
    27-Jan-2025 09:46  
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Might go higher if they don?t meet the 90% threshold
 
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