Share This

Thursday, July 15, 2010

Protecting bondholders vital; Ball in the Court for Pesaka Astana and other defendants

Protecting bondholders vital

Plain Speaking - By Yap Leng Kuen


THE “landmark’’ judgment handed by the High Court that the adviser and arranger of bonds are just as liable as the issuer for losses suffered by bondholders is significant in the development of the local bond market.

The judgement by Justice Datuk Mary Lim, based on a RM149mil lawsuit filed by 10 local financial institutions against issuer Pesaka Astana (M) Sdn Bhd, is an old case for which the oral judgment came out in early July.

In the light of recent corporate scandals, it is a timely reminder that high priority should also be placed on the investors, without whom there will be no bond market.

“In most emerging countries, the issuer side is normally regarded to be more crucial in ensuring the success of the bond market,” said an industry player. Corporates will be asked to issue more bonds, while details such as structure and size will be scrutinised.

However, to ensure continued demand and confidence in the market, investor protection is also vital to drum in the message of a high standard of care.

A high degree of investor protection and other favourable factors have led Malaysia’s bond market to grow by leaps and bounds since the markets faced its major stress test in the Asian financial crisis of 1997/98.
“When we get the buy side going, the issuers will come in droves,” said the industry player.

“We do not want the bond market to go in the same way as the equity market where in so many cases, we see that minority shareholders are not protected. This judgment is certainly critical and provides comfort to bondholders that at the end of the day, investor protection is still granted in this market.”

Already, the smaller issues are struggling in the sense that investors with risk averse appetite are not attracted to these bonds.

A case like this where the company had defaulted in September 2005 on RM140mil worth of Islamic debt securities issued in April 2004, dampens the sentiment even more.

No longer can an arranger just collect the fees and leave the buyer to fend for himself under the “buyer beware” kind of environment. If something goes wrong, he may get a joint suit from the parties involved and not just the bondholders.

“We can also have a situation where during an economic downturn, investors may suddenly decide to sue the arrangers and other parties that have money,” said another industry player.

“Big arrangers may find this worrying as it becomes their responsibility to prove that they are not liable.”
Industry watchers want to see if this represents a blanket judgment which will then have major implications on parties like trustees and rating agencies.

They will have to be responsible throughout the life of the bond. 
Of course, there are possibilities of appeal and the decision could well be uplifted, varied or even reversed. That is yet to be seen.


  • Senior business editor Yap Leng Kuen believes that the point has been made and market players have heard it loud and clear.
    For latest Bursa Malaysia indices, charts and other information click here


    Ball in the court for Pesaka Astana and other defendants

    By FINTAN NG
    fintan@thestar.com.my

    PETALING JAYA: Now that the High Court has ruled in favour of bondholders in the suit brought against Pesaka Astana (M) Sdn Bhd as well as the arranger and trustee of the bond issuance, it is up to these three defendants how they want to respond to the judgment.

    According to a source, the ball is now “at their side of the court”.

    He said it was now up to Pesaka Astana, KAF Discounts Bhd and Mayban Trustees Bhd on how they want to divide the payment of the RM149mil sought by the 10 bondholders, who filed the suit in 2005.

    Pesaka Astana supplies fire-fighting and military vehicles to the Defence Ministry.

    The Singapore Business Times had, on July 2, carried a story which said the judgment would “radically raise the bar on standards governing private debt issues in Malaysia” as the arranger and trustee were just as liable for losses suffered by the bondholders.

    High Court Justice Datuk Mary Lim, in a verbal judgment, had said the plaintiffs, which included CIMB Bank Bhd, had depended on the information memorandum provided by KAF to make informed investment decisions.

    She said the information was in the memorandum and “therefore it is KAF’s liability in the event of any misstatement therein.’’

    The newspaper said the suit underscored a newly-found ruthlessness in Malaysian financial litigation as at least two of the litigants on both sides of the suit were government-linked companies.

    Although Pesaka Astana and related companies had entered into a consent judgment in favour of the bondholders back in 2008, KAF and Mayban Trustees had chosen to go to trial.

    KAF treasury head Manimakudam Karuppiah told StarBiz the company was reviewing the case and would decide on its next course of action soon.

    “However, despite the judgment, there is no impact on the bank as we’re well-capitalised with shareholders’ fund close to RM1bil,” he added.

    Manimakudam said the company had also made full provisions to absorb the penalty and that business had not been affected.

    “We were also recently rated AA by Malaysian Rating Corp Bhd,” he said.

    Mayban Trustees, which the bondholders argued had failed to exercise the necessary care and due diligence expected of a trustee, said in a statement last week that it was “actively considering the next course of action”.

    It said the judgment “has no impact to the business operations of the company” and that it had in place “a strong team of professionals with priority chiefly on protecting the interest of all stakeholders and upholding best standards of service and management practice.”







  • IT gender pay gap getting worse

    Skills Survey 2009: Female techies not pocketing the biggest bonuses either...

    The IT gender pay gap is getting worse, according to results from the 2009 silicon.com Skills Survey.

    More than a third (35 per cent) of female IT workers responding to this year's survey said they were on the bottom rung of the tech pay ladder, earning less than £25k, compared to just under a third of women (32 per cent) last year. And only 14 per cent of male IT workers are in the lowest pay bracket this year, down from 20 per cent in 2008.

    A slightly larger proportion of women than men also take home the second lowest pay packet, of between £25,001 to £40k: 27.5 per cent of women versus 25.5 per cent of men. However when it comes to earnings of more than £40,001, men consistently dominate - and in the highest pay brackets the proportion of men to women is more than double.


    Image credit: Natasha Lomas/silicon.com
    Nearly a quarter (23 per cent) of male respondents reported earning £40,001 to £55k this year, compared to less than a fifth (17.5 per cent) of female respondents; while 17 per cent of male respondents reported earning £55,001 to £70k, versus just 12.5 per cent of women. In the top two earnings brackets there is a significant hike in the proportion of men versus women: 15 per cent of male respondents reported earning £70,001 to £110k this year, compared to just five per cent of women; while 5.5 per cent of men claimed to pocket £110,001+, only 2.5 per cent of women did.

    When it comes to bonuses, while a larger proportion of female techies reported getting a bonus this year than male techies (42.5 per cent of women versus 35 per cent of men) - a change on last year when the sexes were equally likely to get extra cash - men tended to take home bigger bonuses than women.

    The majority of female bonuses this year fall in the less-than-£5k category: 65 per cent of female respondents, versus 47 per cent of men.

    For bigger bonuses men were the clear winners: no female IT workers responding to the survey reported receiving a bonus of more than £20,001, yet 10 per cent of male respondents took home the biggest bucks - including one per cent that reported getting a bonus of more than £100k. And while 43 per cent of men reported a bonus of between £5,001 and £20k, only 35 per cent of women did so.

    In April this year the government published the Equality Bill which includes measures to strengthen the law on pay equality in the public sector. According to the latest figures from the Office for National Statistics, women still earn on average 22 per cent less per hour than men - a marginal improvement on last year when the gap stood at 22.5 per cent.

    Newscribe : get free news in real time 

    1. 1. anonymous

      Statistics. All this proves is that the women spend more time filling in questionaires whilst the men ignore them as they are not very interested. I constantly see more and more females being promoted up the ladder to balance out but a lot are promoted above thier ability and then make a mess of things making it more difficult for women to shine in the future. Promotions should be on talent alone and no other reason and stats like these should be complied properly.


    2. 2. anonymous

      While I don't necessarily agree with the previous poster, these stats prove nothing. We don't know the ages of the respondents, how many women choose to leave the profession early to do other things (leaving perhaps more in junior posts), or even if it was a statistically fair sample.

      For example we have few female techies but several female ex techies in senior positions

      So a good start a debate, but there is nothing here that can be relied upon to provide any real information.


      • 3. blogger123

        Most statistics are made up.


        • 4. NLondon

          Latest figures from the Office for National Statistics show women still earn on average 22 per cent less per hour than men.

        Tuesday, July 13, 2010

        Online con

        Beware the online con


        By SEREAN LAU and CHRISTINA TAN
        newsdesk@thestar.com.my

        PETALING JAYA: It is important for women to check the background of a person they meet over Internet social networking websites to avoid being cheated.


        “You need to check the background of the person to know whether the person is genuine or just a sweet talker. Whatever is posted by the man should be vetted thoroughly like calling up a company to see if he really works there,” said Wanita MCA Cupid Space project executor Peggy Lim (pic).


        She also cautioned women not to rush into making a commitment.

        “You need at least eight months to know a person. There is no need to rush into things,” she added.

        “Feelings are a huge emotional trigger and for a woman, it is important to control these feelings when the courtship has only been going on for a short while.”

        She said that among the reasons that women were scammed by online Casanovas was due to loneliness and desperation as they were afraid they would not be able to find a companion and accepted “any man who fancies them”

        “The essential tools to sustain a relationship are patience and to earn the trust needed,” she said.

        In June, a 47-year-old housewife said that she lost her savings and money she borrowed from her family and friends totalling RM1.2mil to a con man that she befriended on the Internet.

        The man had claimed to be a Briton.

        Meanwhile, MCA Public Services and Complaints Department head Datuk Michael Chong said he received complaints from 18 women on cheating scams with losses amounting to more than RM2.4mil since 2007.

        He urged women to be wary of such con men.

        Chong said the complaints that he received had a similar modus operandi – the men would get to know the women via Internet and send them expensive gifts before demanding for money.

        Chong added that most of the victims were single mothers, divorcees and unmarried women.

        “The con men also introduced themselves as businessmen, sons of senior politicians and professionals like engineers,” he said.

        Chong said he believed the men involved in the scam were foreigners although some may have had the help of locals.


        Related Story:

        They virtually fleece the lonely and the desperate

        The dark truth about a sweet-talking Casanova

        By ONG HAN SEAN
        hansean@thestar.com.my

        KUALA LUMPUR: He is neither good looking nor young, but this sweet-talking Casanova has managed to cheat at least seven women of nearly RM400,000.
        The 41-year-old Singaporean, known as Dennis Lim, has a habit of preying on women through the social networking website, ahmoi.com.

         
        That’s him!: Chong and Qi Qi checking out a picture of Lim at the department chief’s office in Kuala Lumpur yesterday.
         
        One of his victims, Qi Qi, lost RM294,662 within the seven months of their “friendship.”

        “I was not really attracted to him. He was really aggressive and he made the first move online,” said the 34-year-old businesswoman from Penang, who sought the help of MCA Public Services and Complaints Department head Datuk Michael Chong at his office yesterday.

        She said Lim claimed to be a factory manager and knew how to take advantage of her weakness.
        “He used sob stories to get my sympathy.

        “For instance, he claimed his stepmother was admitted into ICU; that his ex-boss had delayed his business reimbursements and that he had met with a road accident before Chinese New Year.

        “I felt sorry for him and wanted to help,” she said, adding that she allowed Lim to use her credit cards when he visited her in Penang in October last year.

        Qi Qi started getting suspicious in March and lodged two police reports in Penang and another two in Singapore.

        She later traced Lim’s caller history from a sub-line she started for him, and found six other women in Malaysia whom Lim had cheated for money and sex.

        “His modus operandi is to get acquainted with lonely, single women online and then slowly work his way into their pockets with his sob stories,” Qi Qi said, adding that the victims had refused to make police reports against Lim.

        Chong urged the other victims to come forward so that he could assist them.
        “I will take this case to the Malaysian Interpol and relevant authorities,” he said.

        He also reminded women to be wary of meeting strangers online.