Singapore IPOs: Why I No Longer Cover Every Listing
Some readers may have noticed that I have not been writing about every Singapore IPO since last year. The simple reason is that life has become busier. Between my day job, an increasingly packed travel schedule, family commitments and desire to play more golf, I have become much more selective about how I spend my time. Writing detailed IPO reviews takes time — reading prospectuses, analysing financials, comparing valuations and understanding the competitive landscape. While I still enjoy investing and writing, I no longer feel the need to cover every IPO that comes to market. Instead, going forward, I will probably focus only on IPOs where I am seriously considering investing my own money or where there is something particularly interesting that is worth discussing. I suspect this will make the blog more useful as well. Rather than writing about every deal, I can spend more time sharing my thoughts on the handful that I believe deserve attention. That bring...

Comments
Do you think the returned funds for those who are unsuccessful from GLP will be on time for the application for MIT ?
The timing is too close and certainly not comfortable !!!
Its billed as a china play but last I check, only 20% of its properties are in China.
Firstly, this is not a reit. There has been no history of dividend being paid out as all profits are being reinvested and there probably won't be in the near future. Any gains investors expect should come from capital gains.
Secondly,from the prospectus, 227 out of its total 296 completed properties are in china. Hence, china properties accounts for 77% of GLP completed properties.
This stock is hot due to factors such as the huge growth potential in china, good track record from its management, good backers such as GIC and many more.