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PRIVATISATION: THE SINGAPORE PERSPECTIVE
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Transcript of PRIVATISATION: THE SINGAPORE PERSPECTIVE
Privatisation and Capital Market Development in Asia
PRIVATISATION: PRIVATISATION: THE SINGAPORE PERSPECTIVETHE SINGAPORE PERSPECTIVE
Yuen Teen Mak, PhD, CACoordinator, Accounting and
Corporate Governance Research Group,
Associate Professor,Department of Finance and Accounting,
National University of Singapore
Privatisation and Capital Market Development in Asia
OUTLINEOUTLINE
• Overview of privatisation• Reasons for privatisation• Modes of privatisation• Retention of government ownership in
privatised enterprises• Performance of privatised enterprises• Future of privatisation
Privatisation and Capital Market Development in Asia
OVERVIEW OF PRIVATISATION IN SINGAPOREOVERVIEW OF PRIVATISATION IN SINGAPORE
• Privatisation program was formally announced in March 1985
• Public Sector Divestment Committee (PSDC) formed in January 1986 and released its report in February 1987
Privatisation and Capital Market Development in Asia
Recommendations of Public Sector Divestment Committee
• The PSDC examined 99 GLCs and recommended 15 for listing, 9 for further privatisation, and 17 for total privatisation. It also recommended that 4 statutory boards be studied for privatisation.
OVERVIEW OF PRIVATISATION IN OVERVIEW OF PRIVATISATION IN SINGAPORESINGAPORE
Privatisation and Capital Market Development in Asia
OVERVIEW OF PRIVATISATION IN OVERVIEW OF PRIVATISATION IN SINGAPORESINGAPORE
• 52 GLCs not recommended for privatisation were those with foreign government participation, single-project companies, companies which have a social rather than commercial mission, and those which were unprofitable or whose future is uncertain
• 6 GLCs were recommended for further study for possible privatisation (defence-related)
Privatisation and Capital Market Development in Asia
• PSDC envisaged a 10-year period for implementing its recommendations on privatisation so that the market can absorb the shares
• At start of privatisation program, most GLCs and statutory boards were already profitable
OVERVIEW OF PRIVATISATION IN OVERVIEW OF PRIVATISATION IN SINGAPORESINGAPORE
Privatisation and Capital Market Development in Asia
OVERVIEW OF PRIVATISATION IN SINGAPOREOVERVIEW OF PRIVATISATION IN SINGAPORE
Statistics• As at April 2000, GLCs controlled by
Temasek Holdings account for about 25% of stock market capitalisation
• The 3 largest listed Singapore companies by market capitalisation are GLCs; the top 5 companies by turnover and the top 4 by total assets (excluding banks) are GLCs
Privatisation and Capital Market Development in Asia
OVERVIEW OF PRIVATISATION IN SINGAPOREOVERVIEW OF PRIVATISATION IN SINGAPORE
• Two of the five listed banks, including the largest, are GLCs
• Between 1985-1996, there were 16 newly-listed GLCs and 15 further sale of shares for already-listed GLCs
• Few new listings or major divestment of shares of GLCS since 1993
Privatisation and Capital Market Development in Asia
OVERVIEW OF PRIVATISATION IN SINGAPOREOVERVIEW OF PRIVATISATION IN SINGAPORE
Privatisation of major listed GLCsGLC % ownership % ownership before divestment after divestmentSIA 77% 56.3%SingTel 100% 78.2%NOL 62% 32.6%Keppel Corp 58.5% 31.7%SNP Corp 100% 49.0%
Privatisation and Capital Market Development in Asia
REASONS FOR PRIVATISATIONREASONS FOR PRIVATISATION
• To withdraw from commercial activities which no longer need to be undertaken by the public sector
• To add breadth and depth to the Singapore stock market by the flotation of GLCs and statutory boards and through secondary distribution of Government-owned shares; and
Privatisation and Capital Market Development in Asia
• To avoid competition with the private sector
• Raising cash through sale of state enterprises, getting rid of poorly managed state enterprises, and freeing state enterprises from political interference so that they can function as commercial entities were not seen to be important reasons
Source: Report of the Public Sector Divestment Committee
REASONS FOR PRIVATISATIONREASONS FOR PRIVATISATION
Privatisation and Capital Market Development in Asia
MODES OF PRIVATISATION OF OWNERSHIPMODES OF PRIVATISATION OF OWNERSHIP
• Capital market
• Direct sale- considered when other objectives are seen
as important, e.g., sale of 100% of POSBANK (a statutory board) to DBS, and proposed merger of SMRT and TIBS
Privatisation and Capital Market Development in Asia
MODES OF PRIVATISATION OF MODES OF PRIVATISATION OF OWNERSHIPOWNERSHIP
• Often only partial privatisation (with government remaining as majority or controlling shareholder)
• However, some smaller GLCs have been completely privatised
Privatisation and Capital Market Development in Asia
• Privatisation through capital market with participation of both retail and institutional (including foreign) investors is generally favoured
– recent privatisation through capital market usually offered only 10-20% of shares to local retail investors
MODES OF PRIVATISATION OF MODES OF PRIVATISATION OF OWNERSHIPOWNERSHIP
Privatisation and Capital Market Development in Asia
“Unless there are special reasons such as the management wanting to take the business over, the original promoters wanting to keep out new and unfamiliar partners, or the parcel of shares being too small, the mode should be random allocation through listing or secondary offer to the public”.
Source: Report of the Public Sector Divestment Committee
MODES OF PRIVATISATION OF MODES OF PRIVATISATION OF OWNERSHIPOWNERSHIP
Privatisation and Capital Market Development in Asia
Reasons for:• If it isn’t broken, why fix it?• Concerns about succession • Government does not need the money• Market may not be able to absorb large
share issues
RETENTION OF GOVERNMENT OWNERSHIPRETENTION OF GOVERNMENT OWNERSHIP
Privatisation and Capital Market Development in Asia
RETENTION OF GOVERNMENT OWNERSHIPRETENTION OF GOVERNMENT OWNERSHIP
Arguments against:• Perceived interference/control by the
government• Questions about ability of GLCs to compete
in the global economy • Unfair competition against private sector
and stifling of entrepreneurship
Privatisation and Capital Market Development in Asia
PERFORMANCE OF PRIVATISED GLCSPERFORMANCE OF PRIVATISED GLCS
• For 16 new listings of GLCs between 1985 to 1996, average underpricing was 57% compared to 47% for non-GLCs (based on market and industry-adjusted returns), but difference is not significant
Source: Tan, R.S.K., Yeo, G.H.H. and Low, Y.Y.Y., “The Initial and Long-Run Financial Performance of Privatized Firms in Singapore”, NUS Working Paper.
Privatisation and Capital Market Development in Asia
PERFORMANCE OF PRIVATISED GLCSPERFORMANCE OF PRIVATISED GLCS
• For 26 newly-listed and already-listed GLCs (further privatisation), the privatised GLCs outperformed non-GLCs, the market and the industry indices on after-market share price performance (for the 60 months following divestment)
Privatisation and Capital Market Development in Asia
• Based on profit margin and return on assets measures, the operating performance of privatised GLCs improved significantly after privatisation.
PERFORMANCE OF PRIVATISED GLCSPERFORMANCE OF PRIVATISED GLCS
Privatisation and Capital Market Development in Asia
FUTURE OF PRIVATISATION IN SINGAPOREFUTURE OF PRIVATISATION IN SINGAPORE
• Government has expressed intention to further divest but has concerns about timing - wants to ensure the right price and that the market is able to absorb the privatised shares
Privatisation and Capital Market Development in Asia
FUTURE OF PRIVATISATION IN SINGAPOREFUTURE OF PRIVATISATION IN SINGAPORE
– e.g., SMRT privatisation delayed because of weak market conditions
– “While we agree that times have changed and there are no compelling reasons for the Government to hold controlling stakes in the GLCs, we cannot divest our stakes in the GLCs overnight.”
(Temasek Holdings, ST, May 5. 2000)
Privatisation and Capital Market Development in Asia
Major GLCs (100% government-owned) expected to be privatised through capital market in the near future:
• Singapore MRT (rail) • Singapore Power (utility)• PSA Corporation (port)
FUTURE OF PRIVATISATION IN SINGAPOREFUTURE OF PRIVATISATION IN SINGAPORE