share_log

Trading Of Great Eastern Shares To Be Suspended After OCBC Closes Takeover Offer

Business Today ·  07/12 23:53

The trading of Great Eastern shares will be suspended from Monday (Jul 15) as less than 10 per cent of the listed company is now owned by the public, the insurer announced late on Friday.

OCBC's takeover offer for Great Eastern closed on Friday, with the bank holding more than 93 per cent of the company.

As of 5.30pm on Friday, the bank had 93.32 per cent of its total shares, up from the 88.44 per cent it originally had two months ago when it first announced a S$1.4 billion (US$1.03 billion) offer to buy the remaining stake, according to a Singapore Exchange (SGX) filing.

Under SGX rules, listed companies must maintain a free float – shares held by the public – of at least 10 per cent. If this threshold is not met, SGX may suspend trading of the company's shares.

In its offer document, OCBC stated that it would not take any steps to maintain the listing status of Great Eastern if the free float requirement is not met and trading is suspended.

For now, under the Companies Act, shareholders who did not accept OCBC's offer will have a right to require the bank to buy them out at the offer price.

The bank had offered a price of S$25.60 per share on May 10, which it said represented a premium of 36.9 per cent over Great Eastern's then last traded price of S$18.70.

Shares of Great Eastern closed at S$25.80 on Friday.

In a statement, the insurer said OCBC's offer and the trading suspension would have no impact on its business and operations.

CNA

これらの内容は、情報提供及び投資家教育のためのものであり、いかなる個別株や投資方法を推奨するものではありません。 更に詳しい情報
    コメントする