November 12, 2012,
The Wall Street Journal
By CHUN HAN WONGThe Wall Street Journal
PHNOM PENH—Cambodia's stock market is set for a
revival early next year when initial public offerings are expected by at
least four local companies, ending a drought for a bourse that has
hosted just one listing since its trading debut in April.
State-owned Telecom Cambodia and Sihanoukville Autonomous Port are
likely to list by June, while two private garment manufacturers are
preparing for first-quarter IPOs, Cambodia Securities Exchange Chief
Executive Hong Sok Hour said in an interview Monday.
Cambodia's fledging stock market has foundered since the boisterous
launch last April of the country's first-ever listing, the $20 million
flotation of state-owned Phnom Penh Water Supply Authority. Industry
executives say a dearth of further IPOs—as candidates struggled to meet
regulatory requirements or decided to hold off until the market gains
depth and liquidity—quelled investors' initial exuberance.
The share price of Phnom Penh Water Supply Authority, which jumped
63% in its first week of trading and peaked at 10,300 Cambodian riel
(about $2.56) on strong volume, has given up all its gains. The stock
ended Monday flat at 6,200 riel, below its 6,300 riel IPO price.
The stock market is "a very new concept for the Cambodian people,"
said Nguon Sokha, director general at the National Bank of Cambodia, in
an interview last week. It will take time for the investor pool to
deepen, she said. Of the 4,000 investor accounts at licensed brokerages,
about a third are held by foreigners, according to the Cambodian
bourse, also known as CSX.
On the other side, many of Cambodia's large private enterprises don't
see an immediate need to go public. Acleda Bank PLC, for example—the
country's largest lender by assets—has long-term plans to list, but only
when it needs fresh capital and considers the local regulatory and
investment climate sufficiently robust, chief executive In Channy said
Monday.
As central banker Ms. Sokha put it, the big private enterprises "want
to see the state-owned companies list first and give momentum to the
market."
State-owned Telecom Cambodia and Sihanoukville Autonomous Port were
originally scheduled to list by the end of 2012 but haven't been able to
meet listing requirements in time, said Mr. Hong of CSX. After they
list, the government could pick Phnom Penh Autonomous Port, a
state-owned port operator, for its next IPO, according to the executive,
who expects the momentum for new listings to pick up over the next two
years.
Some smaller private companies have shown a keener interest than
their larger counterparts, stockbrokers say. The two garment
manufacturers considering IPOs early next year, Grand Twins
International and TY Fashion Co., should be submitting formal
applications within a month, said Stephen Hsu, chief executive of
brokerage Phnom Penh Securities, which is handling those deals. The two
are likely to raise a combined $60 million to $70 million, he said.
"Several other companies—ranging from banks to electricity
companies—are also exploring IPOs," Mr. Hsu said. "If they pull off
their listings, likely in the second half of 2013, we could have between
seven to 10 companies on the stock exchange by the end of next year."
No comments:
Post a Comment