Bangkok Post

SEC promises to improve listing criteria for local stocks

- NUNTAWUN POLKUAMDEE

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is preparing to review the criteria for companies to list on Thai bourses as part of the response to suspicious stock trades of MAI-listed More Return Plc (MORE).

The SEC vowed to improve the listing criteria, which currently require companies to have three consecutiv­e years of profit to qualify for listing on local stock exchanges.

The rules for backdoor listings must also be upgraded to the same stringent level as normal initial public offerings, said the regulator.

An indirect listing on the stock exchange, a backdoor listing refers to a listed company acquiring assets or shares of another company that appear to be larger than the original assets of the listed company.

This results in a change in control of the listed company. Then the acquired company can be listed without having to go through the considerat­ion of the Stock Exchange of Thailand (SET), according to the qualificat­ion criteria for listed companies.

Jomkwan Kongsakul, assistant secretary-general of the SEC, said as MORE is under investigat­ion, the regulator believes long-standing securities acceptance criteria should be reviewed and updated.

The SEC discussed the matter with the SET and both sides agreed in principle. More details have to be finalised at the next discussion, including receiving feedback from market stakeholde­rs before an announceme­nt can be made and a new criteria becomes effective, she said.

Shares of MORE were suspended from trade on Monday after the SET noticed suspicious trading of its shares on Nov 10-11.

Relevant authoritie­s including the Anti-Money Laundering Office have joined hands in investigat­ing the trades, which caused estimated damage of more than 4.3 billion baht to several brokers.

The SEC cautioned investors yesterday to listen to advice from an independen­t financial advisor (IFA) for stocks they invest in and study the recommenda­tions for their own benefit.

MORE president and chief executive Ummarit Klomchitch­aroen requested a waiver from making a tender offer for all securities of its business based on a resolution from the shareholde­rs’ meeting and connected transactio­ns.

The IFA recommende­d shareholde­rs should not vote for approval.

There was also an observatio­n regarding the abnormalit­y of MORE’s share price, which had an impact on the capital increase offering and the shareholde­rs who would exercise their voting rights at the shareholde­rs’ meeting, including the necessity of the capital increase. This event is still under investigat­ion.

The IFA noted that the shareholde­rs who voted at the shareholde­rs’ meeting may not reflect the opinion of current shareholde­rs who were affected by recent events.

The SET continues to request MORE’s board of directors provide clarificat­ion and informatio­n about the suspicious transactio­ns, submitting relevant documents within seven days from Nov 17, along with informatio­n disclosure through the bourse’s informatio­n system.

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