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MM2 Asia [1B0.si]
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tongphlp
Supreme |
08-Jan-2026 13:08
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this time really MATI MATI leow
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Joelton
Supreme |
08-Jan-2026 10:01
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mm2 Asia unit receives S$200,000 payment demand from creditor
This is the third demand for payment that mm2 Asia&rsquo s subsidiaries have received in two weeks
 
[SINGAPORE] A unit of the embattled entertainment group mm2 Asia has received a payment demand for S$200,000, the company said in a regulatory filing on Wednesday (Jan 7).  
 
It said that mm2 Entertainment (mm2E), a subsidiary of mm2 Asia, had on Jan 5 received a letter of demand from solicitors representing Ace Financial Services, relating to the alleged non-payment of the S$200,000 sum, as well as interest and legal costs.
 
Ace Financial Services, a Singapore-based accounting firm, has demanded that the amount be paid within seven days of the letter dated Jan 2, failing which it may commence legal proceedings against mm2E. The filing noted that the loan was originally extended under a facility agreement dated Oct 10, 2022 between the two parties.
 
mm2 Asia said that it is currently seeking legal advice in relation to the payment demand, and will make further announcements when there are material developments. 
 
mm2E, a regional film studio, production and distribution company, is known for producing works such as the Ah Boys To Men movies, and is a distributor of films such as Detective Chinatown 1900 and Studio Ghibli animated films.
 
This marks the third payment demand that units of parent company mm2 Asia has received in roughly two weeks, following two separate letters of demand sent to its subsidiaries by solicitors representing an individual named Yi Xianhuang. 
 
In total, the three letters of demand relate to alleged non-payments of roughly S$25.4 million. 
 
In early December, the High Court allowed mm2 Asia to be shielded from creditors and legal proceedings for four months while it works out a restructuring plan. 
 
This lifeline came after mm2 Asia received a S$74.6 million payment demand from lender UOB in November, with the group later reporting a net loss of S$39.7 million for the half-year ended Sep 30.
 
However, the court&rsquo s decision does not extend protection to its subsidiaries, such as mm2E and mmLive.
 
mm2 Asia was formerly an operator of Cathay Cineplexes, before the iconic cinema chain shuttered in Sep 2025 under millions of dollars in debt. 
 
To stave off an immediate winding-up by banks and creditors, mm2 Asia suspended trading of its shares in Nov 2025, after its board assessed that the group could not prove its ability to continue as a going concern.
 
The counter last traded at S$0.003 on Nov 10, 2025, before its suspension. 
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Joelton
Supreme |
01-Jan-2026 09:50
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mm2 unit receives payment demand for S$6.3 million from creditor
The letter of demand seeks full payment by Jan 9
 
[SINGAPORE] A unit of embattled entertainment group mm2 Asia has received a payment demand for S$6.3 million, the company said in a Wednesday (Dec 31) bourse filing.
 
The subsidiary, mm2 Entertainment (mm2E), on Dec 28 received a letter of demand from solicitors representing an individual named Yi Xianhuang. This concerned alleged amounts owed under various investment agreements in relation to movie productions, as well as a refundable deposit for a television series, the filing said.
 
The regional film studio, production and distribution company is known for producing works such as the Ah Boys To Men movies, and is a distributor of films such as Detective Chinatown 1900 and Studio Ghibli animated films.
 
The letter seeks full payment by Jan 9, failing which Yi may take action against mm2E without further reference. 
 
Yi had previously sent a letter of demand for S$18.9 million to another of mm2 Asia&rsquo s units, mmLive.
 
Earlier in December, the High Court allowed mm2 Asia to be shielded from creditors and legal proceedings for four months while it works out a restructuring plan. However, the protection does not extend to its subsidiaries, such as mm2E and mmLive.
 
mm2 Asia suspended trading of its shares after its board assessed that the group could not prove its ability to continue as a going concern. The stock last traded at S$0.003 on Nov 10.
 
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Joelton
Supreme |
30-Dec-2025 10:29
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mm2 Asia unit receives payment demand for S$18.9 million from creditor
Solicitors are acting on behalf of Yi Xianhuang
 
[SINGAPORE] A unit of embattled entertainment group mm2 Asia on Monday (Dec 29) said it has received a payment demand for S$18.9 million, even as the parent company secured protection from creditors earlier this month.
 
The subsidiary, mmLive, received the latest statutory demand on Dec 23 from solicitors representing an individual named Yi Xianhuang.
 
The company promotes and organises concerts and other entertainment acts, and also rents out musical instruments and equipment.
 
On Dec 10, mm2 Asia was given a lifeline after the High Court allowed the company to be shielded from creditors and legal proceedings for four months while it works out a restructuring plan. However, the protection does not extend to its subsidiaries, such as mmLive.
 
The entertainment group declined to comment in response to queries from The Business Times about the latest payment demand.
 
Yi&rsquo s notice followed a S$74.6 million payment demand from lender UOB on Nov 10, just three days before mm2 Asia reported a net loss of S$39.7 million for the half-year ended Sep 30.
 
The former Cathay Cineplexes operator&rsquo s revenue plunged 53.2 per cent to S$40 million for the second half of the 2026 financial year, from S$85.4 million in the year-ago period.
 
The iconic cinema chain shuttered earlier this year under millions of dollars in debt, and the entertainment group itself is now facing an existential threat as banks and landlords have been issuing letters of demand. 
 
To stave off an immediate winding-up by banks and creditors &ndash the group has more than S$200 million in borrowings due within a year &ndash mm2 Asia suspended trading of its shares after its board assessed that the group could not prove its ability to continue as a going concern.
 
The counter last traded at S$0.003 on Nov 10.
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treetops
Elite |
14-Nov-2025 17:42
Yells: "Moments Today, Memories Tomorrow!" |
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完 了 完 了 barbeque le. Vividthree and UnUsUal will be next.
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tongphlp
Supreme |
14-Nov-2025 13:20
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one word : mati
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Joelton
Supreme |
14-Nov-2025 10:56
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Debt-ridden mm2 Asia&rsquo s H1 net loss deepens to S$39.7 million as existential threat looms
Revenue is down 53.2% year on year at S$40 million
 
[SINGAPORE] Entertainment group mm2 Asia on Thursday (Nov 13) reported a net loss of S$39.7 million for the half-year ended Sep 30, widening from the net loss of S$3.9 million for the year-ago period.
 
Loss per share (LPS) from continuing operations for H1 FY2026 stood at S$0.0061, versus the LPS of S$0.0009 a year earlier. 
 
Revenue plunged 53.2 per cent to S$40 million, from S$85.4 million in H1 FY2025. 
 
This came on the back of a decline in contributions from the group&rsquo s content business, which posted a revenue of S$5 million, down 92.3 per cent year on year from S$64.9 million. 
 
However, revenue from mm2 Asia&rsquo s concert and event business rose to S$33.6 million, up 70.6 per cent from S$19.7 million a year earlier. This was attributed to a higher number of completed projects for the half-year. 
 
Revenue from the rest of mm2 Asia&rsquo s business also increased year on year, rising 8.3 per cent to S$1.3 million from S$1.2 million previously. 
 
The group did not declare a dividend for H1 FY2026. 
 
The latest results come as mm2 Asia faces mounting payment demands from creditors, including banks and landlords of outlets of its shuttered cinema chain Cathay Cineplexes, which ceased operations and entered voluntary liquidation in September. 
 
News of the group&rsquo s troubles first came to light in February, when The Business Times reported that Cathay Cineplexes had received payment demands totalling to around S$2.7 million from the landlords of its cinema outlets at Century Square and Causeway Point. 
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Newcomer19707016
Veteran |
12-Nov-2025 10:49
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Think is hard. Unless got billionaire investors who interested in MM2 new business ideas | ||||
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Joelton
Supreme |
12-Nov-2025 10:47
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Banks and landlords are pounding on the door. Can mm2 Asia survive the siege?
It has been a difficult year for the group, whose Cathay Cineplexes unit is already in voluntary liquidation
[SINGAPORE] Mired in debt and facing insolvency, mm2 Asia is experiencing its annus horribilis.
 
This year, its iconic Cathay Cinexplexes unit shuttered under millions of dollars in debt and now, the entertainment group itself is facing existential threat as banks join landlords in issuing &ldquo pay up or else&rdquo letters of demand. 
 
The company &ndash which produced local blockbusters such as Ah Boys to Men and I Not Stupid 3 &ndash diversified into multiple entertainment sub-sectors, but all that is now unravelling.
 
To stave off immediate winding-up by banks and creditors &ndash the group has borrowings of over S$200 million due within a year &ndash mm2 Asia has suspended trading of its shares and filed a High Court moratorium that could prohibit winding-up resolutions from being passed for four months.
 
The Business Times traces the rise and fall of mm2 Asia &ndash from its formation, listing, acquisition of Cathay to disruption by new players.
 
Origins
2008: Melvin Ang, a former Mediacorp managing director and executive adviser of media and entertainment conglomerate Media Prima, sets up mm2 Entertainment to produce and distribute Chinese-language television programmes and movies in Malaysia and Singapore.
 
2009: The company moves its headquarters to Singapore and mm2 Singapore and mm2 Malaysia are incorporated to tap into the regional market.
 
2010: mm2 Entertainment distributes and produces its first few films: Phua Chu Kang The Movie, Old Cow vs Tender Grass and Love Cuts.
 
2014: In December, mm2 Entertainment lists on the Catalist board as mm2 Asia with a placement of 37.4 million shares at S$0.25 each, valuing the company at S$51.8 million. It has a 2013-14 net earnings of S$2.7 million.
 
Acqusitions and subsidiaries
2015: Company buys 51 per cent of visual effects (VFX) and post-production house Vividthree Productions.
 
It also acquires two cinema businesses and assets from Cathay Cineplexes in Malaysia. In December, it snares a 70 per cent stake in video-on-demand company mm2View.
 
2016: Starhub takes 9.1 per cent of mm2 Asia for S$18 million. In July, mm2 buys more cinemas in Malaysia.
 
In August, it acquires a 51 per cent stake in event production and concert promotion company Unusual Group.
 
The company splits its stock for the second time in October &ndash this time on the basis of one share into two.
 
In November, mm2 incorporates mm2 Entertainment USA in California. It also agrees to buy 13 cinema businesses and assets in 13 locations in Malaysia from Lotus Fivestar Cinemas.
 
2017: In February, subsidiary mm2 International sets up in Shanghai. The next month, mm2 Asia acquires the rights to reality singing show The Voice in Singapore and Malaysia.
 
In April, Unusual lists on the Catalist, raising S$17.4 million. StarHub then increases its mm2 Asia interest to nearly 10 per cent in July after investing an additional S$15 million.
 
In August, mm2 Asia upgrades to the mainboard.
 
One of its largest moves happens in November, when it buys Cathay Cineplexes for S$230 million. The deal includes eight cinemas with 64 screens. This acquisition follows a failed bid for 50 per cent of Golden Village.
 
2018: In March, mm2 Asia announces a tie-up with BT&rsquo s then-parent Singapore Press Holdings to build a lifestyle, entertainment and news portal under the AsiaOne brand.
 
Bruneian Prince Abdul Qawi and Osim founder Ron Sim in April team up to buy a substantial stake in Unusual for S$25.8 million. Sim&rsquo s R3 Asian Gems fund later that month also puts up S$2 million to be a pre-listing investor in Vividthree.
 
Vividthree lists on the Catalist in September with a market capitalisation of about S$84 million.
 
The Covid impact
2020: In April, as the Covid-19 pandemic brings the world to a halt, mm2 Asia launches a free-to-use video streaming service called mPlay Asia. It debuts in the key Chinese-speaking markets of Singapore, Malaysia, Taiwan and Hong Kong.
 
With the cinema business crushed by the pandemic and disruption from content-streaming apps, mm2 Asia in December proposes to merge its Cathay Cineplexes, Mega Cinemas and Lotus Fivestar brands with Golden Village cinemas.
 
2021: In July, mm2 Asia&rsquo s independent auditor notes a material uncertainty regarding the group&rsquo s ability to continue as a going concern, due to its latest losses and liabilities exceeding its asset value.
 
Just a month later, it enters into a deal to sell its cinema business for S$84 million to local investment firm Kingsmead Properties. 
 
2022: The Kingsmead deal falls through in January. The same month, the window for its merger with Golden Village also lapses.
 
The first signs of real trouble emerge in June that year, when Cathay Cineplexes ceases operations at its iconic The Cathay outlet at 2 Handy Road. Its space becomes a pop-up outlet for independent cinema operator The Projector from August, which itself shutters three years later.
 
July also saw mm2 Asia&rsquo s going concern flagged again, with the auditor citing the group&rsquo s current liabilities.
 
In September, it enters into a bond subscription agreement with brokerage UOB Kay Hian for a S$54 million bond deal that is exchangeable for shares of mm2&rsquo s cinema business, mm Connect.
 
2023: All of Unusual&rsquo s equity held by mm2 Asia is transferred to a new wholly owned subsidiary, mmLive, which promotes and organises concerts and other entertainment acts.
 
Cathay Cineplexes moves out of Cineleisure in June, with the space then taken over by a tie-up between Golden Village and The Projector.
 
In September, mmLive invests HK$19 million (S$3.3 million) of exchangeable bonds issued by Hong Kong concert organiser Unipact Entertainment and Productions to enhance its live entertainment presence in Asia.
 
In November, mm2 Asia files notice of three straight years of losses as it struggles to recover from the pandemic.
 
2024: In August, mm2 Asia proposes a S$30 million share placement, with an option to issue additional S$10 million of placement shares. Sim&rsquo s V3 group intends to subscribe to at least S$15 million of the placement. 
 
Debtors come calling
 
Cathay Cineplexes at Jem shut down on 27 March 2025. PHOTO: BT FILE
2025: In January, Cathay Cineplexes receives letters of demand from landlords of two outlets seeking around S$2.7 million in monies owed.
 
The next month, mm2 Asia says it has paid back S$12 million owed to landlords, and that the remaining S$2.7 million is a quarter of the total sum owed to the two outlets&rsquo landlords from Apr 1, 2020, to Jan 31, 2025.
 
Cathay&rsquo s outlet at West Mall closes for reinstatement works, just as the lease on its Bukit Batok shopping complex outlet expires.
 
In March, mm2 Asia says Cathay&rsquo s Jem cinema is closing as Lendlease Global Commercial Real Estate Investment Trust (Reit) is terminating its lease. The Reit sought S$4.3 million in monies owed by Cathay Cineplexes.  
 
Two months later, a S$1.7 million sale &ndash or 21.02 per cent &ndash of mm2 Asia&rsquo s 29.9 per cent stake in its subsidiary Vividthree was proposed.
 
Lendlease Global Commercial Real Estate Investment Trust in July then comes knocking to collect S$3.4 million for arrears.
 
A few days later, the entertainment group proposes a placement of 1.875 billion shares to raise about S$14 million in net proceeds.
 
From Jul 15 to 17, it receives S$3.3 million statutory demand from Frasers and Centrepoint Trust, proposes extending the repayment deadline of S$54 million in bonds maturing in December by six years and consider winding up Cathay Cineplexes.
 
In August, mm2 Asia says it has received eight letters of demand for a total of S$17.6 million outstanding, but could continue as a going concern.  
 
Later that month, mm2 Asia&rsquo s second-half loss surges more than 10 times to over S$101 million as it writes off its cinema business, mm Connect. A few days later, as September rolls around, Cathay Cineplexes ceases operations and enters voluntary liquidation.
 
In the same month, mm2 Asia scraps a stake sale for private equity fund Hildrics Asia Growth Fund VCC, which instead takes 29 per cent of Vividthree in a direct share deal.
 
It then settles a RM1.7 million (S$530,000) dispute with another Malaysian landlord over unpaid rent and other charges for its movie theatres in Melaka and Johor, but one of its units receives another RM1.5 million payment demand from Antenna Entertainments.
 
Standard Chartered issues letters of demand to two associated companies, seeking repayment of over S$905,000.
 
Frasers Centrepoint Trust files a S$2.6 million claim against mm2 Asia after it guarantees lease obligations of its cinema unit at Causeway Point.
 
The largest payment demand comes on Nov 10, when UOB demands repayment of about S$74.6 million from the company and its subsidiaries. The sum is roughly three times the size of mm2 Asia&rsquo s S$26 million market value.
 
Later in the day, mm2 Asia seeks court moratorium that could prohibit winding-up resolutions from being passed for four months, as it pursues restructuring exercise.
 
The company&rsquo s board says mm2 Asia is unable to show it can continue as a going concern.
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tongphlp
Supreme |
12-Nov-2025 09:42
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beggars cant be choosers
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tongphlp
Supreme |
12-Nov-2025 09:20
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fit for the dustbin!
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tongphlp
Supreme |
12-Nov-2025 09:09
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ya....
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QueenMaya
Senior |
12-Nov-2025 09:02
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If you are owed a dollar and can only get back 20 cts or nothing at all. Will you take?
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tongphlp
Supreme |
12-Nov-2025 08:57
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15? make that 50!
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ysh2006
Supreme |
12-Nov-2025 05:25
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Likely how it restructure?... will the debtors agree ?
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Stocky901
Supreme |
11-Nov-2025 17:40
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They have more than 15 letters of demands.. UOB is the latest and with the largest amount.. 🧐
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tongphlp
Supreme |
11-Nov-2025 17:10
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it' s all BS! whom and who and how much they owe $$ you mean they don' t know? ...accountant zzz on the job? what a joke for a listed company..
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tankoksee
Supreme |
11-Nov-2025 17:00
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up lorry liaooooooooooooo  back to dust.
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tongphlp
Supreme |
11-Nov-2025 16:43
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should be more to come... mm2 standard response - we will monitor the situation....monitor my foot!
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Newcomer19707016
Veteran |
11-Nov-2025 16:36
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Collateral will lose money. As equipment got depreciation and subject to wear and tear | ||||
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