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Singapore Institute of Advanced Medicine Holdings Ltd

Singapore Institute of Advanced Medicine Holdings Ltd ("Sam" or the "Company") is offering 114m new shares comprising 4.415m Public Offer Shares and 109.585m Placement Shares at $0.23 each for a listing on Catalist.  The Company aims to raise $26.2m and the majority of the proceeds will be used to repay debt and the balance for working capital. The market cap based on the IPO price is $231.8m and the offer will close on 14 Feb at 12 noon and starts trading on 16 Feb 2024 at 9am.   Principal Business SAM is a healthcare service provider using advanced technology for early and accurate diagnosis to detect and treat cancer, neurodegenerative and cardiovascular diseases.  SAM has strategic collaborations with public and private institutions for research and clinical work.  SAM's goal is to create a comprehensive one-stop ambulatory cancer centre to undertake the challenges to fight cancer and is one of the first to adopt proto beam therapy treatment in Singapore. Fi

Artivision Technologies Ltd.



The Company is principally engaged in the development and provision of video managment products and solutions. The Company is offering 75m New Shares at $0.20 each to be listed on the Catalist. The Company generated sales of US$277,217 and made a loss of US$3.6m for FY2008 (31 March 2008).

Algotech Holdings Ltd (owned by the founders, effective cost is 0.23 cents), Tembusu Growth Fund Ltd (effective cost is 8.22 cents and 45% owned by Andy Lim, husband of Minister Lim Hwee Hwa and substantial shareholder of AdvSCT) and Mlmzar Holding Ltd (effective cost 13.30 cents) will collectilvey own around 53.9% of the Company post-ipo. The market cap is US$95m. David Loh and Han Seng Juan, the top stock brokers in Singapore also hold stakes of 3.53% each in this Company post IPO. All the shareholders have undertake not to sell their shareholdings in the Company for a period of 12 months post its listing.

It is ridiculous to note that the directors (or co-founders) and some executive officers are paid large salaries between $250k to $500k when the Company is not even revenue-generating yet and that is the main reason behind the losses for FY2008. While it is common to receive share options in lieu of cash, it is hardly common to receive huge cash when the Company is still not successful yet.

Frankly i dont think the technology is anything impressive. There are many companies globally that are engaged in this technology and some can be found in Israel and in Taiwan. The key issue will be Execution and sales ramp up. In my personal opinion, the risk of investing in this Company is high and can be rewarding only if sales can take off in a meaningful way. This company is ground-breaking in a sense that it is listing on Catalist with such little revenue (less than US$1m) and a larget loss (US$3.6m). I will also give it a ground breaking rating of zero chillis. Avoid this IPO.

Comments

Anonymous said…
I read your comparision Artivision with Israel & Taiwan "competitors", but surprise that both are not in the same league. Artivision strength in artificail intelligence, and they are not hardware manufacturers -- you can say artivision is pure software company.
Mr. IPO said…
kekeke are you are from Artivision? (just kidding).You are right in that the "competitors" i quoted are not similar. Lets just say that I am making a sweeping statement in that many companies claim that they have superior IP and technology but unfortunately, I have seen many even more "promising' tech companies falter after a short while and i have certainly never seen one that is listed even when it is non-revenue generating. (For my definition, I dont consider sales below US$1m as a revenue-generating company). :)
Anonymous said…
May I know from where did you get the information regarding the company's finance? With my limited googling skills, the only information I could find was:

'Last financial year, Artivision earned full-year revenue of more than $277,000 and gross profit of $82,000. (http://938live.sg/portal/site/938Live/menuitem.43735da1634c4377d21b2910618000a0/?vgnextoid=6e665b3088c9b110VgnVCM1000001f0aa8c0RCRD&mcParam=6f33638896593110VgnVCM100000e101000aRCRD)

Thank you.
Anonymous said…
I am the previous poster; ignore my request, I finally found their financial statement.
Mr. IPO said…
No worries. You can find the prospectus for Catalist companies here. http://info.sgx.com/Offers.nsf/vwIPOOffersbyLodgeDt?OpenView
Anonymous said…
Hi, I'm an outsider who is starting to take an interest in investment. You website has been very informative and provides very good insight.

For Artivision, is there a way to measure its prospect other than its financial statements? What I do understand is that computer vision technology will be the next big thing and there are only a few companies that are actively developing this technology. For ArtiVision to be a singapore based company that is developing this technology, does it mean anything?

What are the things we should look for when we're assessing new companies, particularly those in high tech?
Mr. IPO said…
Hi, you really have to be an 'insider' to know the potential of the technology or patent. In many cases, it has to have a "killer applications" that can generate a lot of $. Like Apple's first macintosh, iPod, iphone, etc. Like Creative's sound blaster (then no more liao). Like Adobe, CISCO, Microsoft etc. In my opinion, unless Artivision has the technology that enables it to be a world class company, the next best thing for its shareholder is to sell that technology or be acquired by the leading giant in that field.Artivision's technology is still relatively new and yet to reach the 'killer application' stage yet but there might be big listed companies in the US that might been keen to acquire that technology. However, it is really too early to tell.
Anonymous said…
Thanks for your advice.

In a way, i'm also an insider because I do research in computer vision. What I lack is an overview of the market because i'm only equipped with a little technical knowledge. I guess i have to work on that somehow but I really have no background in business.

However, it is still exciting to know there's a singaporean company doing video analytics. I might be keeping a close watch on this company.
Mr. IPO said…
You are most welcomed. Feel free to visit again :)
Anonymous said…
i am in the video technology industry , especially surveillance for over 8 years. dealing very close with such technologies. in my opinion, and i've seen their products before. It is absolutely nothing special. The only selling point is that it is a cheaper scale down version of what the established global brands has. This is old technology by today's standard. This type of business needs good R&D investment to ride the wave and stay ahead od competition. No sales, no white knight, no R&D, no hope at all.
Mr. IPO said…
thanks for your comment.
Anonymous said…
This company is raising money to fund its executives exorbitant pay packages. The CEO is paid >$200k a year, with extra allowances for transport, all to generate a revenue of less than $300k over the last 3-4 years.

As another poster said, their technology is really no big deal. Other companies have been out there selling mature competing products for years. They cannot articulate how different their product is (better accuracy, faster response?). No point harping about the form factor (appliance) or what it can recognize (objects) when it can't articulate why people should pay for it.

This company should never have gone IPO. Or even be allowed to go IPO. Those who buy in at IPO are basically handing their money over to pay for the CEO, CTO etc and their drivers/cars.

I would speculate that some of the recent pre-IPO investors have gone in with the provision that the company goes IPO on Catalist within a certain time, so that they can cash out.

I am also guessing there might have been some inside view that this is the right time to take advantage of the newness of Catalist and the eagerness of sponsors and SGX to make it work. Which allows them to call this an IPO and pass the buck to clueless investors.

Even with a 12-month lockout, most of the pre-IPO investors are probably betting and hoping that the the share price will not drop beyond a certain amount. So most will still clear some profits. And definitely a windfall for the founders (at cost of 0.23 cents...)

I don't think there is any share divestment schedule committed by any of the shareholders, so look for the shares to be dumped after the lockout.

In the meantime, this is a penny stock purely for making money on the price movements, not about its revenue or technology prospects.
Anonymous said…
I wonder what is the current status of Artivision.
Michael
Anonymous said…
I think currently they are focusing on internal ramp up with experienced professionals. Now they are finally focusing on the meat. I just bought their shares today.
SmashMuncher said…
I pity all those ra-ra boys who cheered on this company when it got listed.

Credit to the author, at least he examine the management aspect in his blog, which many finance bloggers do not.

It all boils down to the fact that if Bozo the clown runs a company and no matter how good the financial numbers look on the company's balance sheet, the company will still run aground