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
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Construction Companies Australia
I have posted the following comment elsewhere on this blog, but I thought I would post it here under the "IPO famine" post.
It seems a good place to repeat the comment given below. During this IPO famine, perhaps one could spare a few moments for bonds.
Bond IPOs are quite a new thing, the closest one being the DBS Preference shares IPO.
I think SGX may be getting interested in infrastructure bonds, and for those who don't mind malaysian corporate bonds, there are also some in the pipeline.
May I therefore repost the comment made elsewhere in this blog, without anyone thinking this is spamming.
--------- Comment is :
Some comments :
I wonder if readers have any interest in bonds.
Bonds is not something typically of interest to investors.
However, given the supposedly large foreign interest in asian bonds, it may do for everyone to pick up a couple of bonds. This for obvious reasons.
It is unlikely such couple of bonds would make anyone rich, but will provide a steady flow of loose change that may be useful for small but essential purposes.
No-one should have any doubts of the effects of all this money printing (western central banks). And if anyone has doubts, see :
http://malaysiafinance.blogspot.com/2012/12/equities-new-bull-run-started.html
Perhaps a handful of asian bonds will be a good idea for the portfolio. Again, the reasons are so obvious they need not be stated.
Hopefully, everyone would consider it and mention it to their brokers. There should not be insurmountable difficulties in doing IPOs for bonds, in the same way IPOs are done for shares.