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niuyear
    30-Apr-2009 10:46  
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Past experience (like that of Shouzhou project), should serve as a guide and yet, we seem to have forgotten about it and still allow such a scandal happening here in our stock exchange .This act deserves universal condemnation.

 
 
 
des_khor
    30-Apr-2009 10:12  
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What about their GDP ?? will the gorvement report big only ?? same snake same egg ma...

Alligator      ( Date: 30-Apr-2009 07:31) Posted:

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By R SIVANITHY
Published April 30, 2009

THE woes afflicting China stocks listed here, or S-chips, are by now well known: accounting irregularities, missing cash, profit warnings, and the resultant going-concern doubts that have emerged. And they have led to the sector's spectacular collapse; on Tuesday, 34 out of the 51 S-chips that comprise the FT ST China Index (67 per cent) traded for below 20 cents, while 43 (84 per cent) traded for below 50 cents.


To make matters worse, there is an e-mail message circulating within the financial industry titled 'Confessions of an S-chip CEO' that describes in graphic detail how easy it was to cosmetically transform an ordinary, struggling China company with little profits and assets into a seemingly exciting entrepreneurial play with eye-catching earnings, and to offload shares in such a company to unsuspecting Singaporean investors via a listing on the Singapore Exchange (SGX).

BT pointed out over the weekend that it doesn't really matter who the CEO is or who the parties are that facilitated the scams; the more important point is that because there is some element of truth to the claims, it is necessary to learn the appropriate lessons and take the necessary precautions.

To those who are either in the industry or have tracked it closely, revelations of cooking the books and insiders working in cahoots with dealmakers, 'angel' investors, fund managers and analysts to basically hoodwink the public by presenting a misleading investment story (or, to quote from the e-mail, 'by making a fake company real') are probably not surprising because it has long been thought to happen.

How prevalent the crookedness is, of course, is open to debate and so the first and most important thing to note is that a few bad apples do not make the whole barrel of China or overseas- based companies bad.

Playing the blame game

Second, while it is tempting to point the finger at SGX and ask what it was doing to protect the public's interests when dubious China companies were getting listed, it is quite impossible to expect the Exchange to police all aspects of IPOs. It is actually the financial intermediary community that should shoulder a large part of the blame for the collapse of confidence in S-chips in the past year.

Furthermore, had SGX clamped down on S-chips via a tightening of its listing rules in 2004-2007 when the China growth theme gripped the world's imagination and stocks were racing up, it would have undoubtedly come under severe criticism from an investing public desperate to play the China theme at any cost.

So, yes, while regulators should shoulder some blame and, yes, while financial middlemen are culpable, the public was also partly responsible for rushing to buy heavily into a largely unknown and risky sector on the strength of hastily prepared IPO prospectuses (most probably even without reading those documents) and the accompanying shallow broking research.

 
 
Alligator
    30-Apr-2009 07:31  
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By R SIVANITHY
Published April 30, 2009

THE woes afflicting China stocks listed here, or S-chips, are by now well known: accounting irregularities, missing cash, profit warnings, and the resultant going-concern doubts that have emerged. And they have led to the sector's spectacular collapse; on Tuesday, 34 out of the 51 S-chips that comprise the FT ST China Index (67 per cent) traded for below 20 cents, while 43 (84 per cent) traded for below 50 cents.


To make matters worse, there is an e-mail message circulating within the financial industry titled 'Confessions of an S-chip CEO' that describes in graphic detail how easy it was to cosmetically transform an ordinary, struggling China company with little profits and assets into a seemingly exciting entrepreneurial play with eye-catching earnings, and to offload shares in such a company to unsuspecting Singaporean investors via a listing on the Singapore Exchange (SGX).

BT pointed out over the weekend that it doesn't really matter who the CEO is or who the parties are that facilitated the scams; the more important point is that because there is some element of truth to the claims, it is necessary to learn the appropriate lessons and take the necessary precautions.

To those who are either in the industry or have tracked it closely, revelations of cooking the books and insiders working in cahoots with dealmakers, 'angel' investors, fund managers and analysts to basically hoodwink the public by presenting a misleading investment story (or, to quote from the e-mail, 'by making a fake company real') are probably not surprising because it has long been thought to happen.

How prevalent the crookedness is, of course, is open to debate and so the first and most important thing to note is that a few bad apples do not make the whole barrel of China or overseas- based companies bad.

Playing the blame game

Second, while it is tempting to point the finger at SGX and ask what it was doing to protect the public's interests when dubious China companies were getting listed, it is quite impossible to expect the Exchange to police all aspects of IPOs. It is actually the financial intermediary community that should shoulder a large part of the blame for the collapse of confidence in S-chips in the past year.

Furthermore, had SGX clamped down on S-chips via a tightening of its listing rules in 2004-2007 when the China growth theme gripped the world's imagination and stocks were racing up, it would have undoubtedly come under severe criticism from an investing public desperate to play the China theme at any cost.

So, yes, while regulators should shoulder some blame and, yes, while financial middlemen are culpable, the public was also partly responsible for rushing to buy heavily into a largely unknown and risky sector on the strength of hastily prepared IPO prospectuses (most probably even without reading those documents) and the accompanying shallow broking research.
 

 
senecus
    23-Apr-2009 22:38  
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Also require...balls of steel.

Perhaps stainless steel looks more shiny.
 
 
lookcc
    22-Apr-2009 22:49  
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high risk = high returns.....conversely high risk = great loss.......huh.
 
 
Alligator
    22-Apr-2009 22:30  
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from theedge  Wednesday, 22 April 2009 17:03
Article Index
Bargains among tainted S-chips
Yanlord, China Fishery


 
Investors have shunned Singapore-listed Chinese firms after a series of corporate scandals, but the indiscriminate selling has thrown up some cheap gems that offer exposure to the world’s fastest-growing major economy, reported Thomson Reuters. 
 
A lack of trust in published accounts for Chinese firms in Singapore has sent valuations of their stocks, known colloquially as S-chips, plunging to low-single-digit price-earnings multiples even for relatively sound companies that pay regular dividends. While analysts expect further accounting problems to emerge among S-chips, experienced investors are sifting the rubble for bargains. 

“We have found excellent opportunities among the S-chips which gives us an opportunity to get exposure to the China market at relatively low valuations,” said Mark Mobius, lead portfolio manager for Templeton's Emerging Markets Group.
 
“Our private equity funds have a few investments in the S-chips,” he added. 
 
Mobius declined to name the S-chips in his portfolio, but other fund managers and analysts cited Yanlord Land (YNLG.SI) and China Fishery Group (CNFG.SI) as being among the best among the 150-odd Singapore-listed Chinese firms. 
 
Other recommendations include China Milk (CHNM.SI) and sporting goods maker China Hongxing (CHXS.SI), which are both trading at low-single-digit price-earnings ratios despite having little debt and a large amount of cash on their balance sheets. 
 
Chinese firms, many of them small-and-medium enterprises, accounted for around half of new listings in Singapore in recent years and now make up about one-fifth of all listed companies on the Singapore Exchange (SGXL.SI). 
 
Their stocks have fared poorly, however. The FTSE ST Times China index has fallen 77% since hitting a peak in January 2008, underperforming a 45% drop in Singapore's benchmark Straits Times Index (.FTSTI) and a 42% fall in Hong Kong's H-share index of Chinese firms over the same period. 
 
Confidence in S-chips took a hit last October after steelmaker FerroChina (FERR.SI) defaulted on loans just weeks after it announced strong quarterly earnings. 
 
The news got worse in the last three months with auditors flagging alleged accounting irregularities at several S-chips, including textile firm FibreChem Technologies (FIBR.SI), education provider Oriental Century (ORNL.SI) and starch maker China Sun Bio-Chem (CSUN.SI). 
 
“It has become increasingly difficult to pick investible S-chips with conviction as even the many supposedly financially strong S-chips have turned up negative surprises,” said CIMB analyst Ho Choon Seng. 


 
YANLORD, CHINA FISHERY 
Peter Elston, a strategist at Aberdeen Asset Management in Singapore, said on the whole, they were avoiding S-chips.
 
“Yanlord is the only one we hold and we consider it very much the exception to the rule.”
 
Elston said Yanlord, which focuses on high-end residential developments in second-tier Chinese cities, commanded average selling prices that were as much as 50% above those of competitors because of its reputation for quality and design. 
 
Yanlord also had a decent landbank for future development and relatively low debt levels, he added. 
 
Other investors in Yanlord, which is trading at a forward PE ratio of around 11, include Henderson Global Investors and the Government of Singapore Investment Corp (GIC). 
 
As for China Fishery, Lee Shaun Tzen, an analyst at DMG & Partners in Singapore, said demand and the price of fish in China will likely hold steady. 
 
China Fishery, which operates a fishing fleet and processing plants, is attractively priced at 3.5 times price-earnings for 2009 and 2.7 times for 2010, he added. Based on a forecast 30% fall in earnings this year, the average forward PE for the Straits Times index is around 12-13 times. 
 
Other analyst picks are China XLX Fertiliser (CXLX.SI), one of China's biggest producers of coal-based urea, and Midas Holdings (MIDA.SI), a maker of aluminium parts, since both sectors could be beneficiaries of China's stimulus plans. 
 
While Chinese listings in Singapore have dried up amid the financial crisis, things should revive once concerns over the current spate of scandals pass and the valuations commanded by S-chips in Singapore improve, analysts said. 
 
China's NASDAQ-styled second board, scheduled to open this year, would make it harder for Singapore to attract Chinese firms but would not stop the flow, they added.
 
“Chinese firms targeting the Singapore market either want to promote their brand overseas, or think it's a more culturally friendly market than the U.S. or Europe,” said Jiang Jianrong, an analyst at Shanghai-based Shenyin Wanguo Securities Co. 
 
An SGX spokeswoman said attracting foreign firms was a “key pillar” of the Singapore bourse's expansion plans, and that it was confident of getting overseas listings due to the city-state's status as a major fund and wealth management centre. 
 
 

 
freeme
    14-Apr-2009 17:54  
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Its time to pick up those S chip which are dump heavily mths ago.. but dun put all in one, spread out your $$..
 
 
louis_leecs
    14-Apr-2009 00:51  
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lucky i decided sell all my china sky ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,tis baby is my last confident counter also gone case,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,im out of radar at least now,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,s share
 
 
lookcc
    14-Apr-2009 00:27  
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hope after tis one, no more 2 add.
 
 
AK_Francis
    13-Apr-2009 23:36  
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Tks, will add it in.

787180      ( Date: 13-Apr-2009 22:00) Posted:

U miss out this....

 

China Sky Chemical Fibre (CSCF SP)        HOLD
Price/Fair: S$0.155/0.16        Mkt Cap: S$126.3m        Daily: Vol 4.02m        1-Yr Hi/Lo: S$1.17/0.13


Reasons for trading halt

Analyst: Allen Jiao        Tel: (8621) 54047225 ext. 805


China Sky requested for a trading halt this morning. We have just contacted management, who told us the trading halt was requested for the following reasons:


a)        Major shareholder Mr Cheung Wing Lin was forced to sell his pledged shares to meet obligations; and

b)        A profit warning stating that the company has incurred a loss for 1Q09 is to be released.


The major shareholder is in talks with the share pledge counterpart to decide on the amount to sell; thus it may take a few more days for trading to resume. We believe there would be strong selling pressure on the stock once trading resumes






AK_Francis      ( Date: 09-Apr-2009 10:06) Posted:

 

S/N COY Last Px (cts) Date sus Remarks  
1 Addval Tech 5.5      
2 AdvModules 9      
3 Asia Dekor 23.5      
  Beauty China 13.5 30309 sh morgate  
4 Carats 4      
5 ChinaPDye 2.5 111008 boss bkcy  
6 Cityneon 60.5      
7 Ferrochina 54.5 91008 bad debt  
8 Fibrechem 10.5 250209 Audit   
9 Fibrechem NCPS 11      
10 Guangzhao Ind 5.5 180908 Audit   
11 Inch Ken 448      
12 Jur Tech 2.5 91208 bad debt  
13 L & M 0.5      
14 Maveric 61      
15 MemoryD 1      
16 NEL Grp 4 151108 Audit   
  Oriental Centry 15.5 120309 Audit   
17 Sin-Env Tech 29.5 50309 nt. Sh morgate  
18 SP Chem 72.5      
19 Zhguo Jilong 9.5 su    
20 Hiap Moh 39.5   Catalist
21 Sing Food Ind 98 40309 SATS tkg ovr  
22 Chuan Soon Huat 1 250309 bad debt  
23 China Sun 5.5 250309 Audit   
24 ChinaEsave 1   bad debt Catalist
25 Goltron 0.5     Catalist
26 Yong Xin Intl 8   no trading  
27 Sunshine Hldg 1.5   Audit  
28 Dayen Env 3.5   Audit Catalist
29 Zhong Hui Hldg 1 su Audit  


 

 
787180
    13-Apr-2009 22:00  
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U miss out this....

 

China Sky Chemical Fibre (CSCF SP)        HOLD
Price/Fair: S$0.155/0.16        Mkt Cap: S$126.3m        Daily: Vol 4.02m        1-Yr Hi/Lo: S$1.17/0.13


Reasons for trading halt

Analyst: Allen Jiao        Tel: (8621) 54047225 ext. 805


China Sky requested for a trading halt this morning. We have just contacted management, who told us the trading halt was requested for the following reasons:


a)        Major shareholder Mr Cheung Wing Lin was forced to sell his pledged shares to meet obligations; and

b)        A profit warning stating that the company has incurred a loss for 1Q09 is to be released.


The major shareholder is in talks with the share pledge counterpart to decide on the amount to sell; thus it may take a few more days for trading to resume. We believe there would be strong selling pressure on the stock once trading resumes






AK_Francis      ( Date: 09-Apr-2009 10:06) Posted:

 

S/N COY Last Px (cts) Date sus Remarks  
1 Addval Tech 5.5      
2 AdvModules 9      
3 Asia Dekor 23.5      
  Beauty China 13.5 30309 sh morgate  
4 Carats 4      
5 ChinaPDye 2.5 111008 boss bkcy  
6 Cityneon 60.5      
7 Ferrochina 54.5 91008 bad debt  
8 Fibrechem 10.5 250209 Audit   
9 Fibrechem NCPS 11      
10 Guangzhao Ind 5.5 180908 Audit   
11 Inch Ken 448      
12 Jur Tech 2.5 91208 bad debt  
13 L & M 0.5      
14 Maveric 61      
15 MemoryD 1      
16 NEL Grp 4 151108 Audit   
  Oriental Centry 15.5 120309 Audit   
17 Sin-Env Tech 29.5 50309 nt. Sh morgate  
18 SP Chem 72.5      
19 Zhguo Jilong 9.5 su    
20 Hiap Moh 39.5   Catalist
21 Sing Food Ind 98 40309 SATS tkg ovr  
22 Chuan Soon Huat 1 250309 bad debt  
23 China Sun 5.5 250309 Audit   
24 ChinaEsave 1   bad debt Catalist
25 Goltron 0.5     Catalist
26 Yong Xin Intl 8   no trading  
27 Sunshine Hldg 1.5   Audit  
28 Dayen Env 3.5   Audit Catalist
29 Zhong Hui Hldg 1 su Audit  



hotstock      ( Date: 09-Apr-2009 09:02) Posted:

Let create an up-to-date list of the scam-chip so that everyone in this thread can follow carefully. any volunteer


 
 
Hulumas
    13-Apr-2009 19:51  
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When there is no profit, people buy for NAV. (NAV is as the based evaluation of justified indicative share price then). Just like you buy a property with no business/profit/rental income, but you still want to buy if its property price fall below the normal market price right?

knightbridge      ( Date: 13-Apr-2009 19:44) Posted:



it is there, but no ppl want to see.. Rather choose not to believe.. That is human right..

Like eg.. Ban Joo never make money.. Share price can still move up, without making any net profit for years.. This are the companies that are going to get suspended by SGX if still do not show profit... People are still buying, sometimes I am wondering why.....

 
 
knightbridge
    13-Apr-2009 19:44  
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it is there, but no ppl want to see.. Rather choose not to believe.. That is human right..

Like eg.. Ban Joo never make money.. Share price can still move up, without making any net profit for years.. This are the companies that are going to get suspended by SGX if still do not show profit... People are still buying, sometimes I am wondering why.....
 
 
hotstock
    12-Apr-2009 17:22  
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SGX will not be so kind washing laundry in public by creating a scram list.... AK Thanks for the great start.....
 
 
knightbridge
    09-Apr-2009 22:40  
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Got some provide by SGX on the website. Under watchlist .. Not making money for the past 3 years.

hotstock      ( Date: 09-Apr-2009 09:02) Posted:

Let create an up-to-date list of the scam-chip so that everyone in this thread can follow carefully. any volunteer

 

 
rabbitfoot
    09-Apr-2009 22:34  
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Eeek..Another darling B China hit again. Read in BT breaking news....
 
 
AK_Francis
    09-Apr-2009 15:36  
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Had ans ds quite sometime ago. Basically, funds issue n investment coy fr Cyprus is halting to study more on ds coy prospect.

see web page http://www.sgx.com.sg , click on A n select Addval Tech, mark announcements. or go straight below.

  http://info.sgx.com/webcoranncatth.nsf/VwAttachments/Att_0BC8BC71F6FF25BA4825757D00416109/$file/AVT-Announcement_on_reason_for_suspension.pdf?openelement



Sporeguy      ( Date: 09-Apr-2009 14:02) Posted:

AK, do you know why is addvalue tech suspended ?

 
 
Sporeguy
    09-Apr-2009 14:02  
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AK, do you know why is addvalue tech suspended ?
 
 
AK_Francis
    09-Apr-2009 10:06  
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S/N COY Last Px (cts) Date sus Remarks  
1 Addval Tech 5.5      
2 AdvModules 9      
3 Asia Dekor 23.5      
  Beauty China 13.5 30309 sh morgate  
4 Carats 4      
5 ChinaPDye 2.5 111008 boss bkcy  
6 Cityneon 60.5      
7 Ferrochina 54.5 91008 bad debt  
8 Fibrechem 10.5 250209 Audit   
9 Fibrechem NCPS 11      
10 Guangzhao Ind 5.5 180908 Audit   
11 Inch Ken 448      
12 Jur Tech 2.5 91208 bad debt  
13 L & M 0.5      
14 Maveric 61      
15 MemoryD 1      
16 NEL Grp 4 151108 Audit   
  Oriental Centry 15.5 120309 Audit   
17 Sin-Env Tech 29.5 50309 nt. Sh morgate  
18 SP Chem 72.5      
19 Zhguo Jilong 9.5 su    
20 Hiap Moh 39.5   Catalist
21 Sing Food Ind 98 40309 SATS tkg ovr  
22 Chuan Soon Huat 1 250309 bad debt  
23 China Sun 5.5 250309 Audit   
24 ChinaEsave 1   bad debt Catalist
25 Goltron 0.5     Catalist
26 Yong Xin Intl 8   no trading  
27 Sunshine Hldg 1.5   Audit  
28 Dayen Env 3.5   Audit Catalist
29 Zhong Hui Hldg 1 su Audit  



hotstock      ( Date: 09-Apr-2009 09:02) Posted:

Let create an up-to-date list of the scam-chip so that everyone in this thread can follow carefully. any volunteer

 
 
hotstock
    09-Apr-2009 09:02  
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Let create an up-to-date list of the scam-chip so that everyone in this thread can follow carefully. any volunteer
 
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