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Posts Tagged ‘Bangkok’

Sri Trang Agro-Industry shares fall 5% in Bangkok

Shares in Thailand’s Sri Trang Agro-Industry (SRTA.SI), the world’s biggest rubber producer and exporter, fell 5% on Monday on the Thai stock exchange.

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Sri Trang Agro shares slump after setting Singapore IPO price

Sri Trang Agro-Industry Pcl shares fell the most since August 2005 in Bangkok trading after saying it will sell stock in Singapore at $1.20 a share.
 
The stock fell as much as 16%  to 31 baht as of 11:31 a.m. local time.
 
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Thai Sri Trang sets Singapore IPO price at $1.20

Thailand’s Sri Trang Agro-Industry Pcl (STA.BK) said on Wednesday it had set its  Singapore initial public offering price (IPO) at S$1.20 per share, some way below the maximum price of $1.60 it had announced before book-building.

The company’s shares will resume trading in Bangkok at 11:30 a.m.

 
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Thai bourse halts Sri Trang before S’pore news: Update

The Thai stock exchange suspended trading in rubber producer Sri Trang Agro-Industry Pcl (STA.BK) on Monday ahead of the pricing of a Singapore initial public offering (IPO), which has depressed its share price in Bangkok.

The world’s largest processor of natural rubber is expected to raise up to $360 million through its listing on the Singapore exchange.

Singapore is a big centre for rubber trading and the company already has a subsidiary there.

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SIA’s new CEO may shed Virgin Atlantic stake

Singapore Airlines’ Goh Choon Phong, who takes over as chief executive officer tomorrow, may shed the last major remains of the carrier’s global expansion strategy as he confronts rising competition in Asia.

Goh, 47, may get offers for the airline’s 49% stake in Virgin Atlantic after the UK carrier said this month it had received tie-up inquiries. Outgoing CEO Chew Choon Seng called the investment “underperforming” two years ago and has said the airline would consider a sale.

In Asia, Goh faces low-fare competition on long-haul routes from Jetstar and AirAsia X Sdn., as well as renewed efforts by Cathay Pacific Airways and Korean Air Lines Co. to lure lucrative business-class travellers. Middle East carriers Emirates Airline, Qatar Airways and Etihad Airways have also ordered close to 300 planes since 2007 as they build hubs linking Europe and the Asia-Pacific region.

“Goh has a tough job ahead of him,” said K. Ajith, a UOB-Kay Hian Research Pte analyst in Singapore. “The environment is drastically different from five or 10 years ago, when SIA managed to fend off competition by focusing on its branding.”

Virgin, 51% owned by billionaire Richard Branson, hired Deutsche Bank AG to explore options as British Airways Plc boosts cooperation with American Airlines across the Atlantic and completes a merger with Madrid-based Iberia Lineas Aereas de Espana SAtigert. Singapore Air bought its stake in a 600 million-pound ($1.2 billion) investment concluded in 2000.

SIA would consider “interesting opportunities” for the stake, Nicholas Ionides, a spokesman, said in an e-mail. Goh, who joined the carrier as a cadet administrative officer in 1990 after graduating from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, declined interview requests, he said.

Virgin Offer
Whether SIA will sell the Virgin stake will largely depend on what price is offered since the carrier isn’t short of funds, said Rohan Suppiah, an analyst at Kim Eng Securities Pte in Singapore.

“SIA isn’t in a hurry to sell, but if they get a fair price they will,” he said. “Virgin hasn’t provided any significant synergies over the years.”

Delta Air Lines Inc. and Middle East airlines are among carriers exploring a Virgin tie-up, Sky News reported this month, without saying where it got the information from. Singapore Air’s stake complicates a deal as local ownership rules limit non-European investors to minority stakes.

“Either SIA sells or Branson loses effective control by selling part of his stake,” said Andrew Miller, chief executive officer of CAPA Consulting LLC, which advises airlines.
 

Very Supportive
SIA is “very supportive of our business strategy including the review by Deutsche Bank,” Greg Dawson, a Virgin spokesman, said without elaborating. Virgin operates 38 twin-aisle planes, according to its website.

Chew, who has spent almost four decades at SIA, sold a leasing arm and spun off a ground-handling unit while CEO to focus on the carrier’s main flying business. He will take over as Singapore Exchange’s chairman on Jan 1.

Chew’s predecessor, Cheong Choong Kong, bought stakes in Virgin and Air New Zealand to expand overseas. The value of the Air New Zealand investment was written down in 2001, and the remaining holdings were sold off three years later. Virgin was expected to hold an initial public offering within three to five years of SIA’s investment, Chew said in 2006.

Shares Trailing
SIA, which operates 110 planes, was unchanged at $15.54 as of 11:04 a.m. in the city-state. The carrier has trailed the 15-stock Bloomberg Asia Pacific Airlines Index this year amid rising competition for premium and low-cost travellers. The shares have climbed 4% this year, compared with the index’s 27% advance.

Competition is intensifying in the premium market, which accounts for about 40% of SIA’s sales. Hong Kong-based Cathay Pacific is working on a HK$1 billion ($165 million) business-class upgrade to lure executive travellers.

Korean Air, which aims to get 50% of passenger sales from premium classes by 2019, will receive its first five Airbus SAS A380s next year. The superjumbos will each be fitted with 94 business-class seats, compared with the 60 found in SIA’s A380s. Emirates is building a fleet of 90 A380s.

“SIA needs to think about how to position for the longer-term given the competitive landscape,” said Christopher Wong, who oversees $45 billion of assets, including SIA shares, at Aberdeen Asset Management.
 

Budget Competition
SIA has responded to budget competition through a 33% stake in Tiger Airways Holdings. The low-cost affiliate, which operates from Singapore and Australia, plans to form a budget airline in Bangkok next year with Thai Airways International Pcl.

Tiger, Qantas Airways’s Jetstar and AirAsia Bhd. are leading discount carriers’ market share gains in Asia as they add new planes. Budget airlines accounted for about 22% of passengers in the first 10 months of the year at Singapore’s Changi airport. That compares with 12% in 2008, according to data from operator Changi Airport Group.

Low-fare carriers are also adding intercontinental routes. Jetstar started flights to Melbourne from Singapore this month, touting fares 30% cheaper than full-service airlines. It plans to add more long-haul services next year. AirAsia’s long- haul affiliate is offering flights to Australia, London and Japan from its base in Kuala Lumpur.

SIA’s corporate travel base and reputation will be an asset as Goh faces the new competition, said Steven Lim, who manages about $257 million at Daiwa SB Investments in Singapore. The carrier, among six airlines with Skytrax’s highest five-star rating, has also been profitable every year since going public in 1985.

“As a business hub, SIA does enjoy the advantage of business travel,” Lim said. “Goh’s immediate challenge is to continue Chew’s good work, keep the company’s profit record intact and maintain the reputation SIA has as a premium airline.”

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Facebook billionaire visits Bangkok

facebook2Mark Zuckerberg, the founder of the popular social-networking website Facebook and the world’s youngest billionaire, has been spotted in Bangkok, media reports said Thursday. Zuckerberg, Time magazine’s person of the year, was attending a friend’s wedding in the Thai capital this week, The Nation newspaper reported. He was first spotted at the Enchanted Bar late [...]

ST Engineering unit wins contract to supply automatic fare collection system for Bangkok MRT

ST Electronics says it has been awarded a contract to supply an Automatic Fare Collection System (AFCS) for the extension of the Bangkok Mass Transit System (BTS) Sukhumvit Line in Bangkok, Thailand.

The contract was awarded by The Krungthep Thanakom Company Limited (KT), a Bangkok Metropolitan Administration Enterprise.

ST Electronics is the electronics arm of public-listed ST Engineering.

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Bill Clinton “The Hangover 2″ Cameo

From Mel to Bill! Former President Bill Clinton has joined Liam Neeson and Paul Giamatti as the latest A-lister to nab a cameo role in the upcoming sequel to The Hangover, PEOPLE reports. The film is currently in production in Bangkok. Clinton — who will be playing himself in the feature — filmed his brief [...]

Randy & Evi Quaid Seek Asylum From “Star Whackers”

Why are these people allowed to walk the streets without psychotropics? Look out, Vancouver: Kooky, bail-jumping couple Randy and Evi Quaid — Barney Fife’s answer to Bonnie & Clyde — are seeking asylum in Canada after they say eight of their celebrity friends were murdered by a serial killing group dubbed “The Star Whackers,” prompting [...]

Mel Gibson “The Hangover 2″ Cameo

Another drink is likely the last thing actor Mel Gibson needs, but the scandal-plagued star is reportedly on tab for a “Hangover” The Oscar winner is taking a stab at salvaging what’s left of his movie career with a comedy cameo as a tattoo artist in The Hangover 2, The New York Post said Monday. [...]

Mel Gibson to star in ‘The Hangover 2’

Mel Gibson is trying to rebuild his movie career with a comedy role in ‘The Hangover 2.’ The troubled star, who was dropped by the William Morris Endeavor agency in July, has signed to play a Bangkok tattooist in the highly anticipated comedy. The actor was facing a tough time after he faced allegations that [...]

Tiger Air ‘disappointed and surprised’ by AirAsia chief’s remarks

Tiger Airways says it is “disappointed and surprised” that Tony Fernandes, chief executive of AirAsia Group, “has passed racial remarks against Tiger” in a Bangkok Post article published on Oct 15.

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Troicki, Kas win men’s doubles in Bangkok

Serbia’s Viktor Troicki and Germany’s Christopher Kas won the men’s doubles title at the the PTT Thailand Open tournament in Bangkok on Sunday. The Serbian-German duo defeated Israeli’s Jonathan Erlich and Austria’s Jurgen Melzer in straight sets, 6-4, 6-4.

Viktor Bout: Man in the dock

The Americans may finally get Viktor Bout. But what will he tell them?

A STREAM of foreigners trickles in, and usually out, of the fetid jails of Bangkok. Rarely is such a big fish seen as Viktor Bout, a former Russian military-intelligence officer turned arms trader, who faces an extradition hearing on October 4th that could send him to New York to stand trial.

Mr Bout’s business was extraordinary and his protectors a mystery. Now his future is the subject of a diplomatic spat. He was lured to Bangkok in 2008 in an American sting operation. Mr Bout insists that he is a legitimate businessman framed by Russia’s enemies. His loyal wife has insisted that he went to Thailand to take a cooking course. The foreign ministry in Moscow says that the extradition could bust the “reset” in Russian-American relations. …

Retailing in South-East Asia: Exit Carrefour

Carrefour is quitting South-East Asia. Its rivals are waiting to pounce

TRUE to its French origins, Carrefour’s flagship Bangkok hypermarket has a fine cheese selection. But the raw-milk Camembert and other olfactory treats are tucked away behind rows of rice, fish sauce and other Thai staples. Carrefour’s presence in Thailand is similarly modest. Whereas Britain’s Tesco has become the country’s biggest grocery chain, Carrefour lies in a distant fourth place. Across the border in Malaysia it trails well behind Tesco and two other foreign retailers.

And so, with a Gallic shrug, Carrefour is closing up shop in much of South-East Asia. Its 44 stores in Thailand, 23 in Malaysia and two in Singapore are for sale, with a second round of bidding now under way. Potential buyers are said to include Tesco and Casino, a French firm that already has a Thai joint venture, Big C. Analysts reckon that Carrefour’s stores could fetch up to $1 billion. …

Mobile phones in South-East Asia: Talk is cheap

In a saturated market, firms need customers to buy bells and whistles

TAKE a taxi in Bangkok and the driver’s mobile phone is sure to chirp. A long conversation ensues, usually by speakerphone, since few cabbies bother with headsets. It is not just that cabbies are chatty; it is also that talk is cheap. Once reserved for the rich, mobile phones are now ubiquitous in South-East Asia.

But what is good news for taxi drivers is less so for mobile operators. Price wars in nearly-saturated markets have mangled profit margins. One answer is to prod customers to use data services, such as e-mail, web-browsing and access to a variety of “applications”—all of which could, some analysts think, spur new growth. …

Shangri-La Hotels and Resorts – Corporate moves

Michael Cottan has been appointed VP/GM, Shangri-La Hotel, Singapore wef August 2010
Work experience: VP/GM, Shangri-La Hotel, Bangkok; more than 30 years of hospitality experience

Shangri-La Hotels and Resorts – Corporate moves

Michael Cottan has been appointed VP/GM, Shangri-La Hotel, Singapore wef August 2010
Work experience: VP/GM, Shangri-La Hotel, Bangkok; more than 30 years of hospitality experience

Thai Air considering buying stake in Tiger Airways, Sathit says

Thai Airways International Pcl, the national carrier, is considering acquiring a stake in Tiger Airways Holdings after the two airlines agreed this week to jointly invest in a new budget carrier.
 
“The board sees that owning a stake in Tiger Airways Holdings will create the most benefit to the company,” Sathit Limpongpun, Thai Airways vice chairman, told reporters today in Bangkok.
 
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Tiger, Thai Air take on AirAsia with Bangkok venture: Update

Tiger Airways Holdings, the budget carrier part-owned by Singapore Airlines Ltd., will start a low-fare airline in Bangkok, challenging AirAsia Bhd. in Southeast Asia’s busiest airport.

Thai Airways International Pcl and another local company will own 51% first quarter of next year, the carriers said in a statement. Tiger Air will own the rest. The venture will fly domestic and overseas routes of up to five hours.

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