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IPO Chilli Ratings

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Foundation Healthcare Holdings IPO: The Biggest SGX Healthcare Listing Since IHH — Worth Chasing?

Special Edition: Foundation Healthcare IPO Singapore hasn't seen a healthcare IPO of this size in over a decade. Foundation Healthcare Holdings (" FHH ") is looking to raise up to S$242 million at an offering price of S$0.76 per share , implying a market capitalisation of roughly S$1.0 billion — reportedly the largest healthcare listing on SGX since IHH Healthcare's dual-listing back in 2012. Public offer closes 6 July, 12pm , with trading expected to start on 8 July 2026 . Let's dig into what FHH actually does, why parts of the story are genuinely attractive, where I'd want to be careful, and whether the pricing leaves anything on the table for IPO subscribers. The Business: A Doctor Roll-Up With a Tech Layer FHH is a multi-specialty private healthcare platform built on three verticals: Specialists — 108 full-time medical specialists across 16 specialties and 74 specialist clinics as at 31 March 2026, making...

IPO Performance Table

Dear readers,


I am pretty heartened to receive email queries on why my 'calculations' on the performance table seemed to be wrong and asked if i have either received special commission rates or have calculated wrongly. Let me just clarify that:



  1. The commission i pay is minimum $40 or 0.4%. The reason why i pay $40 commission is because i prefer to maintain some goodwill with some brokers and route some IPO trades through them. 
  2. For other times when i trade online, the commision may be minimum $28 or 0.275% etc. 
  3. Rather than tracking the commission separately, my table records cost that includes commission and proceeds that excludes commission. As such, the cost price per share and sale price per share are derived figures. Cost price per share = (Investment cost plus placement commission if any)/no. of shares. Sale price per share = (Gross proceeds less commission)/no. of shares.
Hope the above clarifies.

I am pleasantly surprised how detailed readers have been. :) and thanks for the feedback.

Just for completeness sake, Saxo is charging 0.15% but they don't amalgamate trades and cannot trade pre-open and pre-close. Standard Chartered Bank has no minimum commission and charges quite a low commission.

Pick one that meets your needs. :)


Comments

Anonymous said…
Be aware that both Saxo and Chartered do not use CDP. They hold the shares for you.
I use Saxo for the sophisticated things you could automate - eg. stop losses, trailing stop losses etc but I don't put all my eggs in one basket.
Mr. IPO said…
Yep agreed. I like the OCO function on saxo but i have never used the trailing stop. Is it effective? how does it actually work?