
Lawsuits may provide answers on $8b meltdown   
Straits Times
28 Nov 2013
Goh Eng Yeow
THE legal action being taken against Goldman Sachs could throw new light on the $8 billion share meltdown in Blumont Group, LionGold Corp and Asiasons Capital last month.
Three investors - Ipco International boss Quah Su Ling and company secretary Ng Su Ling and Blumont executive director James Hong - are reported to be taking the United States bank to court in London.
A fourth investor - Mr Wong Chin Yong, the chief executive of Innopac Holdings - is said to be caught in the same trading debacle involving Goldman.
The issue they have with the global bank raises interesting questions: What caused Goldman to suddenly recall, at a moment's notice, the loans it had extended - using shares in the affected counters as collateral - just two days before their subsequent collapse?
Did any third party benefit from the investors' plight and the plight of others like them - when they were under pressure to redeem their loans - to " short-sell" the shares?
Legal papers filed by Ms Quah and Mr Hong showed that they had owned shares in Blumont, LionGold and Asiasons, which they had pledged to Goldman to secure loans for buying more stock.
Both people had opened accounts with the bank on the recommendation of investment consultant William Chan.
As the value of their share portfolios grew, their loan quantums jumped as well.
Then two days before the calamitous collapse of the three counters on Oct 4, they faced demands from Goldman to repay their loans, with just 90 minutes' notice given.
As Ms Quah related in the legal document backing her suit, she could not repay the $61 million owed to the bank " at such unreasonably short notice" , and so was served with a notice of default, close-out and termination via e-mail at 1.37pm that day.
Forced-selling of her shares started soon after.
Ms Quah and Mr Hong also alleged in court filings that despite their proposals to try to settle the loans, Goldman continued to sell the shares that had been pledged with it.
Another interesting observation that emerged from Ms Quah's recounting of the events was that Goldman was able to sell some of her Asiasons shares on Oct 2 and Oct 3 without encountering a big correction in its stock price
But on Friday, Oct 4, shortly after opening bell, Blumont, LionGold and Asiasons suffered huge plunges in their share prices.
This forced the Singapore Exchange (SGX) to suspend their trading to " safeguard the interests of the market as there could be circumstances that would result in the market not being fully informed" .
Similarly, Ipco and Innopac shares plummeted sharply in price, possibly on concerns over the exposure Ms Quah and Mr Wong had to the affected counters.
Interestingly, when the SGX allowed trading of the three counters to resume the following Monday, on Oct 7, it took the highly unusual step of labelling them as designated shares, meaning contra trading and short-selling were banned.
In hindsight, the three counters made easy prey for short-sellers who may have come to know that Goldman was forced-selling a large amount of stock on the open market.
By " designating" the counters, was the SGX taking pre-emptive action to stop them from benefiting from the chaos?
As it is, extensive damage has been done to the penny-stock market with the share prices of Blumont, LionGold and Asiasons plunging by as much as 90 per cent in the past two months, causing huge losses to brokerages, remisiers and retail investors.
These include AmFraser Securities, which faced a potential loss of up to RM120 million (S$47 million) over the three stocks, and US-based Interactive Brokers, which said it might end up in the red to the tune of about US$68 million (S$85 million).
A number of remisiers in other brokerages were also said to have been hit with losses of a few million dollars each, while Mr Wira Dani Abdul Daim - the son of former Malaysian finance minister Daim Zainuddin - has had his Liongold shares forced-sold.
The Monetary Authority of Singapore and the SGX are " conducting an extensive review of the activities around these stocks" .
Hopefully, they will be able to give the investing public some answers as to what exactly transpired in those frantic days.
Whatever their findings, Straits Times reader Tan Kok Thye aptly wrote in an e-mail that investors will always look back with horror that $8 billion could be wiped out just like that in a small stock market like Singapore, in such a short span of time.
 
Maybe a group of people control more than 90percent of shareholding of lion..blumont...all interlink
Octavia ( Date: 28-Nov-2013 09:30) Posted:
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The moment the mkt learnt that the insiders were the victims and not the "manipulators", all penny stocks come to life. Penny stocks have been a lot more active past week ever since the goldman truth was revealed
*Blumont/LionGold/Asiasons/Innopac/Ipco: Interactive Brokers is suing at least 10 clients to recover US$68m in losses from Oct's penny stock and has obtained court order to freeze assets of 8 clients, including certain directors/shareholders of Blumont, LionGold, Asiasons and Innopac. Assets were frozen for M?sian nationals Neo Kim Hock, Peter Chen Hing Woon, Tan Boon Kiat, Quah Su-Ling, Lee Chai Huat and Kuan Ah Ming and 2 BVI-registered companies, Sun Spirit Group and Neptune Capital. Neo is Blumont?s outgoing chairman and has> 20% stake in Neptune, which holds 50m Blumont shares and 1.7% stake in LionGold. Quah holds 2.15% stake in Blumont and is CEO of Ipco Int?l, which holds a 9.7% stake in Blumont. Chen is LionGold?s director of business and corporate development and holds a 2.09% stake in Asiasons. MAS and SGX are currently reviewing the circumstances surrounding the trading of those stocks
asia blue lion bubble pop
Goldman Sachs in penny stock saga
  http://www.singaporelawwatch.sg/slw/headlinesnews/33601-goldman-sachs-in-penny-stock-saga.html?utm_source=rss%20subscription& utm_medium=rss
The Story goes. There was a bluemount, a goldlion and an Asiason. They so hunky dory really handsome and smart looking   animals. One day, they   met their fate when they saw the Golden Sax, a gruesome looking   beast. ............
 
Tomorrow their gruesome fates will enfold. 
Tales from the East. 
 
WanSiTong ( Date: 22-Nov-2013 11:36) Posted: |
maybe goldman sachs realised that the shares prices are pumped up one and not realistic at all and got a shock that the shares price bubbles will burst so they decided to chop the pork immediately to take back their money
what happened to Lion & Asiasons !  Why so much dumping at closing ??  Force sell by GS and the lot again ???  Anyone can throw some light ?
shoutnovoice ( Date: 22-Nov-2013 11:40) Posted:
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Gold fell to its lowest level in more than four months yesterday as the accord between Iran and world powers damped demand for a haven. Silver sank to its lowest in more than 15 wks. Brent crude slumped from a six-week high yesterday, and the USD reached the strongest in six months against the yen after Iran agreed to curtail its nuclear activities and in return won an easing of " certain sanctions" on oil, auto parts, gold and precious metals.
ASIA BLUE LION DA TIO " GAO SAI"
 
Pls go up. I waiting until neck sibei long liao. If one day you see someone with super long neck taking MRT, you all will know its me liao.. 
Peter_Pan ( Date: 22-Nov-2013 11:43) Posted:
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With no court order on the probe...how effective will be their investigation.What level  of cooperation can the investigation team get from the company's directors.Their hands are tied too.
vincente ( Date: 22-Nov-2013 12:37) Posted:
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I think the report wont be out so fast as the offices are in Malaysia and the capital fund managers are in the US.Who is going to bear the investigation cost?
shoutnovoice ( Date: 22-Nov-2013 11:40) Posted:
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asia blue lion back from mc..^^ 
Liongold ceo came out to ask sgx clarify status. Got wrongdoing better fast fast say, no wrongdoing just tell investors. As long as no news, our stock mkt will not recover.
Also waiting for more news of blumont director ng su ling suing goldman sachs. Looks like someone has to pay for the crash.
Also waiting for more news of blumont director ng su ling suing goldman sachs. Looks like someone has to pay for the crash.
How Soh Chee Wen planned his come back
http://aseantradinglink.blogspot.com/2013/11/how-soh-chee-wen-planned-his-come-back.html

http://aseantradinglink.blogspot.com/2013/11/how-soh-chee-wen-planned-his-come-back.html

asia blue lion cute cute no more...on mc cannot act cute, wait orr sai cao cao..!
spss1955 ( Date: 17-Nov-2013 22:15) Posted:
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no more cute cute pictures? no dancing girl or bouncing spiderman? lol
Peter_Pan ( Date: 17-Nov-2013 21:30) Posted:
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