| Latest Forum Topics / Chip Eng Seng |
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Chip Eng Seng Corp
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ahberngh
Elite |
19-Jan-2023 19:03
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Cannot get means cannot get. Extending is unfair to those who don' t agree to takeover. |
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spursfan
Supreme |
19-Jan-2023 17:31
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2. EXTENSION OF CLOSING DATE UOB wishes to announce, for and on behalf of the Offeror, that the Closing Date of the Offer is extended from 5:30 P.M. (Singapore time) on 19 January 2023 to 5.30 P.M. (Singapore time) on 2 February 2023 (or such later date(s) as may be announced from time to time by or on behalf of the Offeror) (the " Closing Date" ).  |
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sinardy
Member |
19-Jan-2023 17:30
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Look like they don' t get 90%   UOB wishes to announce, for and on behalf of the Offeror, that the Closing Date of the Offer is extended from 5:30 P.M. (Singapore time) on 19 January 2023 to  5.30 P.M. (Singapore time) on 2 February 2023  (or such later date(s) as may be announced from time to time by or on behalf of the Offeror) (the " Closing Date" ). |
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sinardy
Member |
19-Jan-2023 14:22
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Oh I see that:   RESULTANT SHAREHOLDING Accordingly, as at 6.00 p.m. (Singapore time) on 18 January 2023, the total number of (a) Shares owned, controlled or agreed to be acquired by the Offeror and the Offeror' s Concert Parties and (b) valid acceptances of the Offer, amount to an aggregate of 676,291,930 Shares, representing approximately 86.12% of the total number of Shares. ![]()
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sinardy
Member |
19-Jan-2023 14:14
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Where do you get that number? As I can see is this   
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ruanlai
Elite |
19-Jan-2023 13:13
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When is the last day of Offer ? What happen if you did not want to sell if more than 90% agreed? Someone if is holding 11% then how ? DYODD |
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Joelton
Supreme |
19-Jan-2023 08:56
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Chip Eng Seng IFA&rsquo s &lsquo fair and reasonable&rsquo finding needs to consider factors that matter most
WHEN Chip Eng Seng Corporation (CES) last month issued a circular in relation to the privatisation offer from its major shareholders, it was interesting to note the independent financial adviser&rsquo s (IFA) opinion on the deal.
 
The offer of S$0.75 per share represented a steep 43.9 per cent discount to CES&rsquo s revalued net asset value (RNAV) per share.
 
But the IFA, Xandar Capital, deemed the offer to be &ldquo fair and reasonable&rdquo &ndash and recommended shareholders accept it.
 
In the circular, the IFA spelled out its rationale for the opinion.
 
Xandar Capital said it had considered various factors eight of these had weighed in favour of the offer&rsquo s &ldquo fairness&rdquo , compared to only three to the contrary.
 
In an unusual move, the Singapore Exchange (SGX) directed a set of queries to the IFA after the circular was published.
 
Among these was a request for elaboration &ndash with &ldquo specific details&rdquo &ndash on how the IFA came to its view.
 
In defending its opinion, Xandar Capital noted that the &ldquo against&rdquo factors did not outweigh the &ldquo for&rdquo factors, despite the discount to RNAV.
 
The IFA is rightfully entitled to its view, of course.
 
But shareholders would likely prefer it &ndash and indeed, be better served &ndash if the most material factors are given heavier weightage when it comes to determining the fairness of an offer.
 
Fair and reasonable
 
Under the Singapore Code on Take-overs and Mergers, an IFA has to conclude in its advice whether an offer is &ldquo fair and reasonable&rdquo .
 
The term &ldquo fair&rdquo relates to the value of the offer price or consideration against the value of the securities. An offer is deemed to be &ldquo fair&rdquo if the offer price is greater or equal to the securities&rsquo value.
 
Meanwhile, the term &ldquo reasonable&rdquo requires the IFA to consider other matters as well as the value of the securities. Some of these matters include the existing voting rights in the offeree company held by the offeror and its concert parties, as well as the market liquidity of the securities.
 
Among the eight factors that Xandar Capital considered include the historical trading price of the shares, and the earning multiples of comparable listed companies.
 
Xandar reported the price-to-net asset value (NAV) ratio of the offer was higher than that of comparable listed companies, while the price-to-RNAV ratio was higher than the range of property takeover transactions.
 
There were, however, three factors that counted against the fairness of the final offer consideration.
 
Xandar Capital said the price-to-RNAV ratio was lower than the average ratio of non-privatisation transactions.
 
It also noted that &ldquo the valuation ratios implied by the final offer consideration are lower than the mean corresponding ratios of the privatisation transactions as well as the property privatisation transactions&rdquo , but did not specify what those valuation ratios were.
 
More transparency about those valuation ratios would have been preferable. It would also have been helpful if they had separated the privatisation transactions from the property privatisation transactions &ndash as was the case in the factors &ldquo for&rdquo the offer.
 
Besides providing greater clarity to shareholders, those details would address concerns about whether the methodologies used to count factors &ldquo for&rdquo were consistently applied to the factors &ldquo against&rdquo the fairness of the offer.
 
Materiality of factors
 
Beyond counting the number of factors, the IFA&rsquo s assessment should also consider the materiality of each metric.
 
After all, some indicators deserve greater emphasis than others.
 
My colleague, Leslie Yee &ndash who is a shareholder in Chip Eng Seng &ndash said in a column last month that he intends to reject the offer because the price is too low. He noted at the time that the offer price was a discount of 24 per cent to NAV per share of S$0.9906 as at end-June 2022.
 
For a property player such as CES, which has most of its material assets mainly related to property, NAV and RNAV should be the key considerations for shareholders.
 
The IFA also acknowledged the importance of this metric in the report, calling the company&rsquo s P/RNAV ratio &ldquo the more appropriate statistics for property development companies&rdquo .
 
In this regard, the offer looks less attractive.
 
The CES offer implies a price-to-RNAV ratio of 0.56. In comparison, the mean and median comparable ratios in the privatisation of property development companies stood at 0.63 and 0.67, respectively.
 
Only the transaction involving Top Global had a lower price-to-RNAV ratio than the CES offer.
 
The IFA noted that the price-to-RNAV was still higher than that in previous property takeover transactions. However, this was in reference to non-privatisation transactions.
 
As the offer for Chip Eng Seng is being carried out with the intent to privatise the company, shareholders would surely be most interested in how the deal compares to other successful privatisation deals.
 
And it may be more useful for greater emphasis to be placed on such past precedents.
 
Past precedents
 
While Xandar Capital noted that the price-to-RNAV of the CES offer was &ldquo within the range&rdquo of property privatisation transactions, it didn&rsquo t mention that all of the previous voluntary general offers cited were deemed &ldquo not fair&rdquo by their respective IFAs.
 
The deals for Roxy-Pacific Holdings, SingHaiyi Group, Fragrance Group and Top Global were all deemed to be &ldquo not fair, but reasonable&rdquo , even though their IFAs still recommended that shareholders accept the offers.
 
Meanwhile, the voluntary general offer for GYP Properties was deemed &ldquo not fair and not reasonable&rdquo , with the recommendation to reject the offer.
 
The only previous comparable case cited that got a &ldquo fair and reasonable&rdquo opinion was World Class Global&rsquo s scheme of arrangement.
 
It isn&rsquo t apparent why greater emphasis was not placed on these past precedents.
 
Another question is whether other metrics, such as comparing the offer to the trading valuations of currently-listed comparable companies, are a reasonable benchmark for fairness.
 
Many SGX property counters trade at sizable discounts to their NAVs. Past privatisation offers &ndash even at a premium to the last traded price and volume-weighted average price (VWAP) &ndash have been deemed &ldquo not fair&rdquo , due to the poor price-to-RNAV ratio.
 
It is also worth noting that the premium of CES&rsquo s final offer over the last transacted price, one-month and three-month VWAP were lower than the corresponding mean and median premiums of the other property privatisation transactions cited by the IFA.
 
While a simple count may suggest that the &ldquo for&rdquo factors outweigh the &ldquo against&rdquo factors in determining the fairness of the CES deal, shareholders may wish to pay closer attention to the materiality of the factors used in the assessment &ndash and decide on the merits of the offer &ndash before tendering their shares.
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bigeater
Member |
18-Jan-2023 22:53
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86.12% as of 18 Jan.  Likely able to get 90% by tomorrow.  If need money fast then accept the offer, if not just wait for complusory acquisition
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Cadence88
Veteran |
17-Jan-2023 09:31
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They have gotten 77.29% of the stake as of Jan 16.
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bigeater
Member |
17-Jan-2023 02:29
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Not in this case. Offeror will just pay whoever accept their offer.  If they don' t reach 90% shareholding,  the company will still be listed until the offeror is willing to come back with a totallyy new offer.  For the current offer, the offeror has expressed that they do  not intend to revise the final offer consideration.  you can refer to the below announcement/reminder.  My thought is since the offeror is buyign at 75, the company must have worth more than this. CES used to be a good dividend yield company. https://links.sgx.com/1.0.0/corporate-announcements/ZHKP9ZMP92G6XQC0/e6645d1b8c69e3855f646ef5b7696d6f868bf583c8b05a0664ee1d54aa65b8d1
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Cadence88
Veteran |
16-Jan-2023 16:15
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SHould be only after privatisation effort is successful right?
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jcho1962
Member |
05-Jan-2023 20:46
Yells: "Don't Worry, Be Happy" |
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Thanks for highlighting as I didn' t read the offer document. My experience with  Indofood Agri Resources Ltd was different.
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bigeater
Member |
05-Jan-2023 20:13
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should be within 7 business days upon receipt of offer, as mentioned in the offer document extracted below " in respect of acceptances of the Offer which are complete and valid in all respects and are received after the Offer becomes or is declared to be unconditional in all respects in accordance with its terms, but before the Offer closes, within seven (7) business days of the date of such receipt."  
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bigeater
Member |
05-Jan-2023 19:22
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Could be those who think the acceptance will not reach 90% and that the offeror has to offer another exit offer price to be delisted. Unless Offeror does not mind to hold less than 90% and remained listed. But Intention of Offeror extracted from Offer Document is as follow: 3 Offeror&rsquo s intentions The Offeror intends to make the Company its wholly-owned subsidiary and does not intend to preserve the listing status of the Company. Accordingly, the Offeror, if and when entitled, intends to exercise its right of compulsory acquisition under Section 215(1) of the Companies Act and does not intend to support or take any step (including the placing out of Shares by the Offeror) for the public float to be restored and/or for any trading suspension of the Shares by the SGX-ST to be lifted in the event that, inter alia, less than 10% of the total number of issued Shares (excluding any Shares held in treasury) are held in public hands. In addition, the Offeror also reserves the right to seek a voluntary delisting of the Company from the SGX-ST pursuant to Rules 1307 and 1309 of the Listing Manual.&rdquo  
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sdpartie ( Date: 05-Jan-2023 15:33) Posted:
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would be nice to see some other party interested ... we can hope
bigeater ( Date: 04-Jan-2023 22:34) Posted:
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seemeyouhuat ( Date: 05-Jan-2023 14:21) Posted:
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Yells: "Don't Worry, Be Happy"
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seemeyouhuat ( Date: 05-Jan-2023 14:21) Posted:
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ysh2006 ( Date: 05-Jan-2023 08:00) Posted:
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bigeater ( Date: 04-Jan-2023 22:34) Posted:
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