The Pak Banker

Singapore toppled as king of Southeast Asia's IPOs

-

Singapore's reign as the premier destinatio­n for initial public offerings in Southeast Asia has come to an end.

The city-state's exchange had the smallest haul of new share sales among the region's four largest stock markets in 2015. Listings this year on Southeast Asia's biggest bourse have totaled $34 million, lagging Thailand and Malaysia.

Singapore's slide down the IPO rankings reflects not so much its own failings, but the growing ability of rivals from Jakarta to Bangkok to convince local issuers to stay at home instead of flocking to the regional hub. Indonesia, which has Southeast Asia's biggest population and largest economy, plans to start an exchange dedicated to young technology companies, while Thailand's premier has highlighte­d the importance of the country's capital markets.

"The smaller Southeast Asian exchanges have been promoting them- selves as a listing venue," said Pankaj Goel, co-head of Southeast Asia investment banking at Credit Suisse Group AG. "It makes sense for Indonesian companies to list in Jakarta and for Thai companies to list on Thailand's stock exchange."

Singapore's decline in new listings adds to the challenges faced by Boon Chye Loh, who became chief executive officer of the city's exchange in July and has been trying to restore confidence in a market where turnover hasn't recovered from a mystery pennystock crash in 2013.

Companies that listed last year in Singapore raised $366 million, according to data compiled by Bloomberg, its worst performanc­e since 2001. The amount was less than 10 percent of funds raised from Thailand's IPOs, just a third of Malaysia's and half of Indonesia's.

Of the 13 IPOs in Singapore in 2015, four were from foreign firms -two Malaysians, one Chinese and one Israeli. In 2010, 10 foreign companies from China, Indonesia, Malaysia and Norway were among the 31 listing debuts in the city state.

Globally, companies have raised $14.5 billion from IPOs in 2016, a 67 percent plunge from the same period last year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

"The competitio­n is not so much between one exchange and another but ensuring that there are enough listingrea­dy candidates," said Lee Suet Fern, managing partner at law firm Morgan Lewis Stamford LLC.

The Indonesia Stock Exchange is trying to persuade local companies listed in Singapore as well as foreign natural resources firms operating in its country to list in Jakarta. The push is part of an effort to become Southeast Asia's biggest stock exchange within five years, CEO Tito Sulistio said in February. He is also asking for rule changes to enable IPOs for real estate trusts and more state-owned enterprise­s. The Philippine Stock Exchange has been pitching to multinatio­nal compa- nies with operations in the country, according to PSE President Hans Sicat. Phoenix Semiconduc­tor Philippine­s Corp., a unit of South Korea's STS Semiconduc­tor & Telecommun­ications Co., debuted in Manila in 2014.

Malaysian companies including palm oil producer Felda Global Ventures Holdings Bhd., billionair­e T. Ananda Krishnan's Astro Malaysia Holdings Bhd. and IHH Healthcare Bhd., Asia's biggest hospital operator, chose to list at home in recent years, said Bursa Malaysia Bhd. CEO Tajuddin Atan.

It's not just the big local companies that Malaysia is attracting. Bursa Malaysia in July tweaked its listing rules to boost its attractive­ness and cut compliance costs, said Tajuddin. In Thailand, local companies raised the most in Southeast Asia in the past three years after its stock exchange introduced rules for listing infrastruc­ture funds, said Santi Keranand, head of the issuer marketing division at the Stock Exchange of Thailand.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Pakistan