The Edge Singapore

Regulator revisits Chip Eng Seng’s 2018 married deal with Tangs

- BY BENJAMIN CHER benjamin. cher@ bizedge. com

Amarried deal between the Lim family controllin­g Chip Eng Seng ( CES) and billionair­e couple Gordon and Celine Tang, which was approved by the Securities Industry Council ( SIC) last October, has come under the scrutiny of the regulator once again.

In the Oct 5, 2018 deal, the Tangs, with an estimated net worth of US$1.4 billion ($ 1.9 billion) according to Forbes, had acquired a 29.73% controllin­g stake in CES for $ 200.1 million. This was just below the 30% threshold, which, under listing rules, would require them to buy out minority shareholde­rs at the acquisitio­n price of $ 1.08 a share, 14.8% higher than the Oct 5, 2018 share price of 94 cents.

The seven shareholde­rs who had sold their shares to the Tangs were all related and, with the exception of one, held various senior appointmen­ts in the group. On Oct 8, CES disclosed that two Lim sisters would retain stakes of 1.55% and 0.38%, respective­ly, in the company after the deal while the other five shareholde­rs would no longer hold any shares.

On Oct 11, Celine was appointed non-executive chairman, and two executive directors related to the former controllin­g shareholde­rs resigned. Raymond Chia Lee Meng, then executive chairman and group CEO, also stepped down as chairman, although he remained as executive director and CEO.

SIC had approved the transactio­n back then and there was little noise or complaint from anyone about the deal until last month, when CES announced a renounceab­le underwritt­en one- forfour rights issue at an issue price of 63 cents each.

Under the terms of the rights issue, the Tangs, along with Chia, have given irrevocabl­e undertakin­gs to subscribe fully to their entitled rights shares of 49.3 million.

What this means is that Celine’s stake would hit 43.43% based on the enlarged share capital, following the rights issue. Again, this would have triggered a mandatory general offer for all the shares, but SIC had approved in July CES’s request to waive the obligation.

Corporate governance expert Mak Yuen Teen cried foul, positing that the Tangs would gain effective control of the company after the rights issue without having to make a general offer at the same $ 1.08 price to other shareholde­rs.

Since the furore, SIC said it was investigat­ing the October 2018 transactio­n between the Tangs and the controllin­g shareholde­rs. “SIC is looking into the acquisitio­n of shares in the company in October 2018 by the relevant parties. As our enquiry is ongoing, we are not able to comment further at this point,” the regulator said in a statement.

When The Edge Singapore reached out to Celine for comments on the investigat­ion, she replied in an email: “The share acquisitio­n was transacted in accordance with the relevant regulation­s and we are giving full cooperatio­n to the SIC. As there is an ongoing enquiry by the SIC, it would not be appropriat­e for us to comment further on this.”

Corporate governance experts and lawyers whom The Edge Singapore spoke to have also declined to comment, highlighti­ng the sensitivit­y of the case. While SIC investigat­es and deliberate­s over its findings, the directors at CES have made it clear that the company will be going ahead with the rights issue, with the whitewash waiver approved by SIC still in effect. E

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