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Quid Pro Quo My Foot

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<TABLE border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=600 align=center><TBODY><TR><TD width=44>[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Title[/FONT]</TD><TD width=10>:</TD><TD width=546>[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]S'pore reportedly disputes ruling by Indian regulator over Temasek, GIC [/FONT]</TD></TR><TR><TD width=44>[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]By[/FONT]</TD><TD width=10>:</TD><TD width=546>[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][/FONT]</TD></TR><TR><TD width=44>[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Date[/FONT]</TD><TD width=10>:</TD><TD width=546>[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]04 October 2010 2203 hrs (SST) [/FONT]</TD></TR><TR><TD width=44>[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]URL[/FONT]</TD><TD width=10>:</TD><TD width=546>[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/singaporebusinessnews/view/1085079/1/.html [/FONT]</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
<TABLE border=1 cellSpacing=5 borderColor=#cccccc borderColorLight=#cccccc borderColorDark=#cccccc cellPadding=3 width=600 align=center><TBODY><TR><TD>[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]SINGAPORE : Singapore is said to be contesting a ruling by India's securities market regulator to cap the investments by Temasek and the Government of Singapore Investment Corporation (GIC).

This is according to a report by the Economic Times of India, which said the city state had conveyed its protest in a letter to the Indian government.

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) believes that both companies are related as they are both owned by the Singapore government.

Hence it believes that they should be subject to current rules which forbid a single foreign fund from owning more than a 10 per cent stake in a listed Indian company.

The SEBI have specified that both Temasek and GIC could only own up to a combined 15 per cent stake in a company, or takeover rules would be triggered.

The Indian regulator had also asked them to appoint a single custodian for reporting purposes.

However, Singapore believes that subjecting both companies to such investment caps would violate the Comprehensive Economic Co-operation Agreement (CECA) which was signed by the two nations in 2005.

Under CECA, both Temasek and GIC are to be recognised as two distinct entities. This means that both firms are entitled to each own up to a 10 per cent stake in a company.

Singapore's Ministry of Trade & Industry could not provide a response at press time.

- CNA/al




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Temasek invests in Brazilian oil and gas firm OOG

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<HR>Temasek invests in Brazilian oil and gas firm OOG

Wed, 20 Oct 2010 13:33


SINGAPORE: State-linked Singaporean investment firm Temasek has invested US$400 million (RM1.2 billion) in Brazil's Odebrecht Oil and Gas (OOG) in a further push into South America, a joint statement said today.
"The funds will be used for fresh investments and will consolidate OOG as an integrated services company for the oil industry," the joint statement said.
Temasek Holdings' investment will also help Odebrecht expand its footprint in Brazil and globally "especially in Angola and Latin America," the statement said, adding that Temasek now holds a minority stake in the company. The precise size was not specified.
Odebrecht president Miguel Garin said having Temasek as an investor was in line with his company's growth strategy.
Matheus Villares, managing director of Temasek in Brazil, said there were growth opportunities in the industry because of the discovery and surveying of large deepwater oil and gas reserves, including off the Brazilian coast.
One of the world's largest sovereign wealth funds, the collective value of Temasek's global investments reached a record high of S$186 billion (RM$444 billion) in March this year.
Most of Temasek's investments are in Singapore, Asia and other emerging economies. It has stakes in Singapore Airlines, Singapore Telecom and Standard Chartered Bank.
However, Temasek also has an investment in Chilean airline LAN. This year it has also invested in mining companies Platmin Limited of South Africa, Inmet Mining of Canada and Chesapeake Energy of the United States, according to the company's website.
- AFP
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DBS eyeing Indonesia assets but not China bank stakes

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DBS eyeing Indonesia assets but not China bank stakes: Update

<TR><TD valign="top">Written by Thomson Reuters </TD></TR><TR><TD class=createdate valign="top">Monday, 25 October 2010 14:18

DBS Group <DBSM.SI>, aiming to expand beyond its home base of Singapore, is open to buying Indonesian assets that offer good returns but is not interested for now in Chinese banks where it can only get minority stakes, its chief executive said.

Piyush Gupta, chief executive of Southeast Asia’s largest bank, also told a media briefing in Taipei on Monday that lower interest rates in Singapore were having a negative impact on the group’s net interest income, but not a dramatic one.

Gupta, who took over as head of DBS last November, has sought to boost the bank’s presence in southeast Asia where it lags its two Singaporean rivals, United Overseas Bank <UOBH.SI> and Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp <OCB.SI>.

He told the briefing that Indonesian assets are expensive, but he would consider acquisitions because Indonesia is a “very good return market.”"

“Three to four times price/book would be workable,” he said, referring to Indonesian asset valuations.

But Chinese banks were not on the acquisition list just now, Gupta said.

“We are not interested in buying a stake in a Chinese bank, as long as China only allows minority stakes for foreign banks,” he said.

DBS also plans to to raise the capital of its Taiwan unit to T$22 billion ($924 million) in the next year from T$7 billion this year.

Last Updated on Monday, 25 October 2010 14:20
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SGX slides, ASX soars after merger news

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Oct. 25, 2010, 2:21 a.m. EDT
SGX slides, ASX soars after merger news

Bourses aim to strengthen regional presence with the combination


<!-- Methode filePath: "/Live/2010/10/25/Stories/sgx_asx_Oct25.xml" --><!--<for each="var content in flow.Content"> <if condition="content is Paragraph"> #var paragraph = content as Paragraph; <for each="var chunk in paragraph.Chunks"> <if condition="chunk is TextChunk"> #var textChunk = chunk as TextChunk; <if condition="paragraph.Type == ParagraphType.Headline"> #//<set headline="textChunk.Text.Value" /> </if> <else if="paragraph.Type == ParagraphType.Headline2"> #//<set headline2="textChunk.Text.Value" /> </else> </if> </for> </if> </for>-->By V. Phani Kumar, MarketWatch

HONG KONG (MarketWatch) — Shares of Singapore Exchange Ltd. tumbled Monday, and those of Australia’s ASX Ltd. soared, after the Singaporean bourse operator confirmed an 8.4 billion Australian dollar ($8.3 billion) stock-and-cash merger deal for ASX.
SGX said the deal would leverage the duo’s reach and combined strength within the Asia-Pacific region. The move comes at a time when competitors, such as Hong Kong Exchanges & Clearing Ltd. and mainland Chinese stock exchanges, are expanding rapidly through new listings.
“The proposed combination will bring together the complementary businesses of two successful exchanges in the Asian time zone, with internationally recognized regulatory standards,” SGX said in a statement.

Under the terms of the deal, SGX will acquire all outstanding common shares in ASX for A$22 each in cash and 3.473 new SGX shares. SGX shares ended at 9.54 Singapore dollars ($7.37) on Friday, implying a valuation of A$8.4 billion, or A$48 for each ASX share.
The price marks a 37.3% premium to ASX’s Friday closing price of A$34.96 in Sydney.
SGX said that pre-tax cost synergies and other transaction-related cost savings are estimated to be about $30 million annually on existing cost structures.
In Monday’s trading after the deal’s announcement, ASX (PINK:ASXFY) (AUSTRALIAN:AU:ASX) shares soared 22.5% in Sydney, while SGX (SINGAPORE:SG:S68) (PINK:SPXCY) slid 2.4% lower.
Under the deal, SGX Chief Executive Officer Magnus Böcker “is anticipated to become” CEO of the new entity, while ASX Chairman David Gonski would serve as deputy chairman, the SGX statement said. SGX chairman-elect Chew Choon Seng would be non-executive chairman, it said.

“The combined exchange group, ASX-SGX Ltd., will have pro-forma revenues of approximately $1.1 billion and pro-forma earnings before interest and income tax of approximately $700 million” based on their results for the year ended June 30, in addition to a market capitalization of $12.3 billion as of Oct. 22, the last trading day preceding the announcement, SGX said.
Th deal takes the SGX-ASX duo’s market capitalization closer to that of the Hong Kong bourse, which is currently the world’s largest stock exchange by market capitalization. HKEx (THE:HK:388) (PINK:HKXCY) currently has a market value of 187.8 billion Hong Kong dollars (24.1 billion). Shares of HKEx were trading 3.3% higher after the deal was announced.
“We believe that the market will view an SGX-ASX combination as a defensive one, both being exchanges that have relatively mature organic domestic-growth opportunities and facing the prospect of losing effective monopoly status with rising pricing pressures as alternative exchanges and trading venues erode [market] share over time,” Citigroup analysts wrote in a report, before SGX confirmed details of the acquisition.

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OCBC pips DBS as No1 bank in S-E Asia

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OCBC pips DBS as No1 bank in S-E Asia
Its market cap surges to $34.2b, $1.7b more than DBS's $32.5b. -BT

Sun, Nov 14, 2010
The Business Times
By Siow Li Sen
OCBC Bank has overtaken DBS as the largest bank in South-east Asia in terms of market capitalisation, as analysts rerated the stock following its strong third-quarter results.
Yesterday, OCBC continued its juggernaut run, ending 31 cents higher at S$10.24, giving it a market capitalisation of S$34.2 billion, S$1.7 billion more than DBS's S$32.5 billion. It is S$5.3 billion ahead of United Overseas Bank's market cap of S$28.9 billion.
Interestingly, OCBC had been trailing UOB - until August. By Sept 15, its market cap had became decisively bigger to claim the No 2 position. OCBC has left DBS in its dust since Monday as investors charge into the stock after analysts noted that the bank had posted the best operating results.
OCBC's stock price is now up 12.5 per cent year-to- date while DBS's and UOB's are in negative territory, down 8.6 per cent and 6.1 per cent respectively.
In a Nov 10 note, Nomura said that OCBC chief executive David Conner spent three days meeting clients in the UK last week, to an overwhelmingly positive response.
'Solid Q3 results were a peer-differentiating tailwind that allowed David to focus on the qualitative element underpinning the success in deepening the group's Asean platform such that OCBC is now the fastest growing, most product-diversified Sing banking group, the largest, most profitable foreign bank in Malaysia and a top 10 bank in Indonesia.'
It also has the 'fastest growing loan book and fee income, (both quarter-on-quarter and year-on-year) and most products - commercial bank, investment bank, life insurance and private banking', said Nomura analyst Anand Pathmakanthan.
DBS and UOB also reported better-than-expected Q3 results but analysts say that they are impressed with OCBC's management which has shown that it can deliver. 'In our view, the stars are aligned for OCBC's share price to be rerated further,' said Ng Wee Siang, BNP Paribas analyst. Earlier concern over its acquisition of ING Asia Private Bank has dissipated and the much feared staff exodus proved unfounded, he said.
The acquisition has actually bulked up its private banking business and filled in the product gaps, putting OCBC in an enviable position to better compete with larger peers.
This article was first published in The Business Times.
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Capital Square may be put on the market soon

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</TD></TR><TR><TD>Business @ AsiaOne
Capital Square may be put on the market soon
Grade A office block in Church Street could be worth around $900 million.

20101223.161314_23dec_capitalsquare.jpg


Sat, Dec 25, 2010
The Business Times
By Kalpana Rashiwala
CAPITAL Square, a Grade A office development at Church Street in the Raffles Place micromarket, is expected to be put up for sale soon. It could be worth about S$900 million.
BT understands that Cushman & Wakefield will be appointed as marketing agent for the property. It was one of about four or five property consultants invited to make submissions under a Request for Proposal recently.
The property has a net lettable area of 386,525 sq ft, comprising a 16-storey office tower, two rows of conservation shophouses and over 360 car park lots. It is on a site with a remaining lease of about 84 years.
Capital Square is owned by Germany's Ergo Insurance Group and managed by MEAG Pacific Star Asset Management, a joint venture between Pacific Star Group and MEAG, which is asset manager of Munich Re and Ergo.
The building was developed by Keppel Land and Rodamco. The duo sold the property around late 2002 in a deal that valued the asset at $490 million to Ergo. That transaction was structured as an asset securitisation which raised $505 million through the issue of seven-year bonds. Market watchers recall that ahead of the bonds' maturity, Ergo had mulled a sale of the asset last year, but in the end opted for a $549 million refinancing deal which involved the issuance of notes arranged by Australia and New Zealand Banking Group.
BT understands that Cushman could be planning a tender or expression of interest exercise for the sale of Capital Square next month with a view to concluding a deal by April 2011.
Some industry players suggest that Capital Square, which was completed in 1998, could fetch about $2,300-2,400 per square foot, or about $889-928 million. They based this on the $2,400 psf achieved (excluding income support) for K-Reit Asia's and Suntec Reit's recent purchases of a one-third stake each in Marina Bay Financial Centre's Phase 1 (comprising two Grade A office towers, Marina Bay Link Mall and over 600 carpark lots).
'However, MBFC is a brand new development while Capital Square is 12 years old. There may also be space coming up for re-leasing from next year when some tenants move out,' points out one property consultant.
Major tenants at Capital Square include Citigroup, Morgan Stanley and Bloomberg. It boasts column-free floor plates of up to 30,000 sq ft for the office tower, among the biggest in the location. 'This is one of the better-quality office buildings in the Raffles Place area. The landlord could probably charge rentals today above $10 psf a month,' said an office leasing agent.
So far this year, about $8.8 billion worth of office investment sales deals have been done.
Besides K-Reit's and Suntec Reit's acquisitions of a one-third stake each in MBFC Phase 1, other major deals include DBS Towers ($870.5 million), Chevron House ($547.1 million) and GuocoLand's purchase of the site above Tanjong Pagar MRT Station with a minimum office component.
This article was first published in The Business Times.
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Singapore Air New CEO May Shed Virgin Atlantic Stake

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Singapore Air New CEO May Shed Virgin Atlantic Stake

January 02, 2011, 4:45 AM EST More From Businessweek

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<CITE>By Chan Sue Ling</CITE>
(Updates with closing share price in 14th paragraph.)
Dec. 31 (Bloomberg) -- Singapore Airlines Ltd.’s 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 percent stake in Virgin Atlantic after the U.K. 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 Ltd. and Korean Air Lines Co. to lure lucrative business-class travelers. Middle East carriers Emirates Airline, Qatar Airways Ltd. 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 percent 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 SA. Singapore Air bought its stake in a 600 million-pound ($930 million) investment concluded in 2000.
Singapore Air 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 Singapore Air 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 Singapore Air 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
Singapore Air 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 Singapore Air, 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 Ltd.’s chairman on Jan. 1.
Chew’s predecessor, Cheong Choong Kong, bought stakes in Virgin and Air New Zealand Ltd. 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 Singapore Air’s investment, Chew said in 2006.
Shares Trailing
Singapore Air, which operates 110 planes, fell 1.5 percent to S$15.30 in Singapore trading today. The carrier posted the third-worst performance in the Bloomberg Asia Pacific Airlines Index this year, rising 2.4 percent, amid increasing competition for premium and low-cost travelers. The 15-stock index jumped 28 percent in 2010.
Competition is intensifying in the premium market, which accounts for about 40 percent of Singapore Air’s sales. Hong Kong-based Cathay Pacific is working on a HK$1 billion ($128 million) business-class upgrade to lure executive travelers.
Korean Air, which aims to get 50 percent 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 Singapore Air’s A380s. Emirates is building a fleet of 90 A380s.
“Singapore Air 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 Singapore Air shares, at Aberdeen Asset Management.
Budget Competition
Singapore Air has responded to budget competition through a 33 percent stake in Tiger Airways Holdings Ltd. 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 Ltd.’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 percent of passengers in the first 10 months of the year at Singapore’s Changi airport. That compares with 12 percent 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 percent 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.
Singapore Air’s corporate travel base and reputation will be an asset as Goh faces the new competition, said Steven Lim, who manages about $200 million at Daiwa SB Investments Ltd. 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, Singapore Air 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 Singapore Air has as a premium airline.”
--With assistance from Steven Rothwell in London. Editors: Neil Denslow, Michael Tighe
To contact the reporter on this story: Chan Sue Ling in Singapore at [email protected]
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Neil Denslow at [email protected]
 

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Temasek’s Israel to retire from board, executive roles

<table class="contentpaneopen"> <tbody><tr> <td class="contentheading" width="100%"> Temasek’s Israel to retire from board, executive roles </td> <td class="buttonheading" width="100%" align="right"> </td> </tr> </tbody></table> Tags: Temasek Holdings | Temasek Holdings Pte
<table class="contentpaneopen"> <tbody><tr> <td valign="top"> Written by Bloomberg </td> </tr> <tr> <td class="createdate" valign="top"> Wednesday, 16 March 2011 19:06 </td> </tr> <tr> <td valign="top"> <table width="100%" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0"> <tbody><tr><td width="95%">
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Temasek Holdings Pte, Singapore’s state-owned investment company, said Executive Director and President Simon Israel will retire from his executive and board roles effective July 1.

Israel, who turns 58 in May, assumed the role of president last year and has been a member of the board since August 2005. He will continue to serve in his own individual capacity on the boards on some companies owned by Temasek, the company said in an e-mailed statement today.
Israel’s departure comes almost two years after the company parted ways with former BHP Billiton head Charles “Chip” Goodyear, who was going to replace Ho Ching as chief executive officer, because of differences in strategy. Temasek, which manages $186 billion, last year named Israel as president, along with Gregory Curl, once a candidate for CEO of Bank of America Corp., and former Singapore Exchange head Hsieh Fu Hua.

“As I have shared with Ho Ching periodically, it has been my wish for some time to retire from a full-time executive role,” Israel said in the statement. “Now that we have a good team of very capable and committed people in place in Temasek, I feel it is as good a time as any for me to move on to a non-executive role.”

‘Evolution of Temasek’
Before Temasek, Israel joined Paris-based Danone in 1996 and was the Asia Pacific chairman of the world’s largest yogurt maker. Prior to Danone, he had a 22-year career at Sara Lee Corp. in Asia.

Israel contributed to the “evolution of Temasek as an international investor,” the company said. Temasek has transformed itself from a passive holder of stakes in government-controlled firms to an investor with more than two- thirds of underlying assets abroad.

“Simon has contributed significantly to the deepening of Temasek’s capability and discipline as an active investor,” Ho said in the statement. “He has played an invaluable role in the evolution and reshaping of Temasek as an active international investor and value-adding shareholder.”

Israel is on the board of Temasek-linked companies including CapitaLand, Southeast Asia’s biggest developer, Singapore Telecommunications, the region’s largest phone operator, and Neptune Orient Lines, Asia’s second-largest container shipping company.

Israel, who’s from New Zealand, was appointed executive director at Temasek starting July 1, 2006. He was first named a non-executive director in 2005 as part of the company’s “board rejuvenation”, Temasek said at the time.


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Wednesday, 16 March 2011
© 2011 - The Edge Singapore
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Munich Re unit to sell Capital Square to Keppel Land fund and NTUC Income for $889m

<TABLE class=contentpaneopen><TBODY><TR><TD class=contentheading width="100%">Munich Re unit to sell Capital Square to Keppel Land fund and NTUC Income for $889m </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
<TABLE class=contentpaneopen><TBODY><TR><TD vAlign=top>Written by Bloomberg </TD></TR><TR><TD class=createdate vAlign=top>Sunday, 20 March 2011 22:21 </TD></TR><TR><TD vAlign=top><TABLE border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%"><TBODY><TR><TD width="95%">
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Munich Re, the world’s largest reinsurer, agreed to sell a Singapore office property owned by its unit for $889 million to Keppel Land’s real-estate fund management arm and NTUC Income.

The deal, the largest of its kind this year, values the 16-storey Capital Square, located in the nation’s central business district, at about $2,300 per square foot, property investment company Pacific Star Group said in an e-mailed statement today. The buyers are Keppel Land’s Alpha Investment Partners, which manages US$5 billion ($6.4 billion) in assets, and NTUC Income.
Capital Square was purchased by Ergo Insurance Group, a Munich Re unit, for $505 million in 2002 and has been managed by MEAG Pacific Star Asset Management, according to Singapore- based Pacific Star Group. The 386,525 square-feet property, which includes two rows of heritage shophouses, accommodates local offices of Morgan Stanley, Citigroup Inc. and Bloomberg LP, Keppel Land said in a statement on its website today.

Capital Square was expected to fetch as much as $927 million, Singapore’s Business Times newspaper reported on March 18, without saying where it obtained the information.

Australia & New Zealand Banking Group is the sole arranger for the financing of this transaction, according to the Keppel statement.


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Sunday, 20 March 2011
© 2011 - The Edge Singapore




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Your habit of reproducing tons of article is extremely irritating. If you want to make a point just make it in one sentence. And if you call me a Malaysian pig another time, i will go to a Malaysian bomoh and put a curse your mother.:oIo:
 

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SGX-ASX deal likely to face Senate inquiry



SGX-ASX deal likely to face Senate inquiry

Published 6:22 PM, 22 Mar 2011



<HR style="MARGIN-TOP: 5px; MARGIN-BOTTOM: 5px; COLOR: rgb(62,121,180)" SIZE=1>QUICK SUMMARY | FULL STORY | FINANCIAL MARKETS

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Federal parliament is likely to hold an inquiry into the Singapore Exchange's $7.5 billion bid for the ASX Ltd, which could further delay any conclusion of the deal until July.
Coalition Senator Barnaby Joyce told the Senate that the opposition would support an inquiry if the deal was approved by the Foreign Investment Review Board (FIRB) and Treasurer Wayne Swan.
Independent Nick Xenophon had asked the Senate to set up an inquiry, but his motion was lost after Mr Joyce said an inquiry would be better held after the FIRB process.
"At this point in time, we will not be supporting this inquiry. But we put it on notice that in a future time, which we envisage will be in the next four weeks or so, we will - unless Mr Swan does the bleeding obvious and stops this going forward," Mr Joyce told the Senate.
Mr Xenophon wants the inquiry to examine whether the deal is in Australia's national interest, if it would have an impact on Australia's ability to attract investment, and to look at the role of the Singapore government in the proposed merged entity.
The deal needs approval of the FIRB and then Swan, who must rule whether the merger is in Australia's national interest.
The deal also needs parliament to approve the removal of a 15 per cent ownership cap on the ASX.
Mr Xenophon proposed the inquiry report back by June 30, which would mean the Senate could not endorse any change to the ASX ownership cap before July.
While the inquiry's findings will not be binding on the government, the results could have a significant influence on how non-government senators will vote on the issue.
Mr Joyce, who is Senate leader of the junior opposition National Party, stepped up his opposition to the deal, warning that merchant banks and broking firms would follow the ASX to Singapore if the deal went ahead.
"If the stock exchange goes to Singapore, how long do you intend to wait before the merchant banks go there, or the stock brokers go there, or a large section of the commerce of our nation floats overseas?" Mr Joyce told reporters.
The deal was first announced in October, but SGX said it made its submission to FIRB on March 11, after bowing to political pressure by agreeing to give ASX an equal number of directors in the merged group.
But the Sydney Morning Herald newspaper, quoting a senior government source, has said if FIRB did not block the deal, Swan would oppose it.
However Swan on Monday said he would not be swayed by politics and said the reports were speculation.
ASX shares are now trading 21 per cent below SGX's offer price, with investors worried a deal will not go through.
The stock, which fell 2.5 per cent on Monday, recovered on Tuesday to close up 0.5 per cent to $A34.36.

 

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Singapore to tighten monetary policy slightly in April

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Singapore to tighten monetary policy slightly in April
Inflationary pressures from higher oil prices and tight job market are two reasons, say economists. -Reuters

Fri, Apr 01, 2011
Reuters
SINGAPORE - Singapore is expected to tighten monetary policy in April, with the central bank either sanctioning a small, immediate jump in the local dollar or signalling it will let the currency rise at a faster pace over time, a poll of economists by Reuters showed.
Most economists said inflationary pressures stemming from higher oil prices and a tight job market will prompt the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) to tighten policy further, despite potential weakness in the global economy arising from problems in Japan and the Middle East.
China raised bank reserve ratios on March 18 as it battles to contain inflation, one week after a massive earthquake and tsunami hit Japan. India, the Philippines, Taiwan and Vietnam have chosen to raise interest rates in recent weeks, despite concerns that troubles in Japan could hurt regional and global growth.
However, the MAS is unlikely to act as aggressively as economists had expected back in February when the government raised its 2011 inflation outlook, a move that sparked a rally in the Singapore dollar.
The Singapore currency has gained 1.6 per cent against the dollar so far this year, following a near-9 per cent gain in 2010. It hit a record high of 1.258 to the U.S. dollar on Thursday, buoyed by investors chasing regional currencies for their robust economic growth prospects and by broad weakness in the U.S. dollar.
According to a Reuters poll of 12 economists, nine predicted Singapore will tighten policy in some form when it releases its half-yearly policy statement later this month.
Three other economists said MAS will retain its current course of allowing modest gains in the Singapore dollar.
"Going into the April 2011 meeting, the key focus for the MAS is still going to be the elevated level of inflation," said Enrico Tanuwidjaja of OSK-DMG , one of six economists who predicted Singapore would revalue its currency by re-centering the trading band.
"The key reason for the partial upward re-centering is to address the elevated level of inflation in the near-term while allowing slower growth to dampen inflationary pressures over time," he said of his forecast.
Singapore conducts monetary policy by managing the value of its dollar against a basket of other currencies, which it deems as more effective than setting interest rates given the city-state's high level of imports.
The exact composition of the basket is secret, although economists estimate the U.S. dollar component at around 20-30 per cent based on the proportion of Singapore's trade that is carried out in dollars or in currencies pegged to the greenback.
MAS's current policy stance, announced on Oct 14, is for a gradual and modest appreciation of the Singapore dollar, with a slight increase in the slope of the policy band.
The central bank also said then that it would widen the policy band slightly in view of the volatility in financial markets. Most economists believe the Singapore dollar is near the top of the current band.
"They already have an underlying tighter policy whereby there's an appreciation stance and a wider band," said Alvin Liew of Standard Chartered Bank , who recently changed his call from tightening to standing pat.
Bank of America Merrill Lynch and Credit Suisse have also predicted the MAS will maintain its October policy stance.
The following are ways MAS could tighten policy when it already has a tightening bias:
RE-CENTERING THE POLICY BAND
Historically, this has been regarded as the most aggressive of the options available to MAS as it translates into an immediate appreciation of the Singapore dollar.
Citigroup , DMG-OSK, DBS , Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp , United Overseas Bank and HSBC predicted MAS will re-centre the band when it releases its monetary policy statement later this month.
Several economists such as DBS Irvin Seah and UOB's Chow Penn Nee said a one-off re-centering did not necessarily suggest a more aggressive tightening of policy by MAS, but a response to near-term inflation and longer-term uncertainty about growth.
"Steepening of the slope would imply a more gradual appreciation of the Singapore dollar in the immediate term, but over the longer term, the signal is one of a faster appreciation," said UOB economist Chow Penn Nee.
MAS re-centered the policy band at the prevailing level of the Singapore dollar nominal effective exchange rate (NEER) in its April 2010 statement.
STEEPENING THE SLOPE OF THE POLICY BAND
By steepening the slope, MAS signals its willingness to let the Singapore dollar appreciate at a faster pace. Economists estimate MAS's current stance allows the Singapore dollar to rise by 3 to 3.5 per cent on an annual basis.
Barclays Capital forecasts the MAS will let the Singapore dollar appreciate at a slightly faster annualised pace of about 4 per cent against its currency basket from about 3.5 per cent currently. CIMB also expects MAS to allow the currency band to steepen slightly in April, within a slightly wider trading band.
WIDENING THE TRADING BAND
While a wider trading band gives the Singapore dollar more room to appreciate, MAS had in the past widened the trading band in response to greater volatility in financial markets rather than as a tool to signal a faster appreciation or depreciation.
Economists are mixed in their outlook with some predicting MAS might narrow the band slightly, now that markets are calmer, and others expecting the central bank to hold off such a move till its October policy.




























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Australia set to reject Singapore bid for ASX

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Australia set to reject Singapore bid for ASX

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Singapore's bourse has not ruled out closer cooperation with ASX in future
The Australian government has said it plans to reject a bid for the country's bourse on national interest grounds.
Last month, SGX, the Singapore stock exchange made a $8.3bn (£5.1bn) bid for ASX, the firm that owns the Australian Stock Exchange.
But the Australian Treasurer, Wayne Swan, has signalled he will block the deal due to "serious concerns about the proposal".
The two bourses saw the move as a way to cut costs.
The cross-border proposal has faced significant opposition in the Australian Parliament, which would have needed to approve the deal.
"Governments are getting pretty tough on lots of things," said Jason Bedow, chief executive at Argo Investments.
"I wouldn't say governments are particularly business-friendly at the moment."
Closer co-operation
The takeover blow may not rule out the Singapore bourse working closer with its Australian counterpart in future.
"We will continue to pursue organic as well as other strategic growth opportunities, including further dialogue with ASX on other forms of cooperation," said SGX in a statement.
In recent months there has been a flurry of global stock exchange takeover bids, which are seen as a way to pool resources and benefit from economies of scale.
Last week, the US exchanges Nasdaq and ICE mounted a $11.3bn bid for NYSE Euronext, to top a previous offer from Deutsche Boerse.
While in February, the London Stock Exchange (LSE) agreed a merger with TMX Group, which operates the Toronto Stock Exchange.
 

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Special Report: How Singapore lost Down Under in ASX bid



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Special Report: How Singapore lost Down Under in ASX bid

r

2:58am EDT
By Michael Smith and Saeed Azhar
SYDNEY/SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Australian Treasurer Wayne Swan was in the South Korean coastal city of Gyeongju preparing for meetings with G20 finance ministers when he heard the news.
An adviser had to pry the politician's attention from his mountain of summit paperwork to relay the story hitting the news wires that Friday afternoon in October: the Singaporean and Australian stock exchanges were in takeover talks.
Swan was stunned.
This was a large, politically-sensitive transaction involving the possible sale of Australia's stock exchange and no one had sounded out his office beforehand, a common practice given Australia's Treasurer has the power to block deals involving foreign owners.
Swan, whose Singaporean counterpart Tharman Shanmugaratnam was also attending the G20 summit, knew from the beginning the deal was going to be a political headache.
It was just after lunchtime in Sydney that Friday when the Singapore Exchange and Australia's ASX Ltd both went into a trading halt pending an announcement about a "possible business combination".
The news sent traders rushing back to their offices and raised eyebrows in the Singapore market as the first media reports surfaced that SGX was planning a full takeover of the Australian exchange.
While Swan was distracted that weekend talking to finance ministers in South Korea about global growth imbalances, SGX boss Magnus Bocker and his army of bankers and lawyers worked around the clock to finalize the terms of the ambitious $8 billion takeover bid.
On Sunday, Bocker flew from Singapore to Sydney where the long battle to sell his stock exchange consolidation dream was about to kick into first gear.
The clearly excited SGX chief joined his Australian counterpart Richard Elstone on Monday morning to brief the media and investors on the deal their bankers code-named "Avatar", presumably named after the Hollywood movie about future humans invading an alien planet for its resources.
The duo wanted to create Asia's fourth-largest stock exchange through an $8 billion cash and shares offer for ASX, which would cut costs and enable the combined group to tackle new competitors.
"Magnus and I have not had a lot of sleep over the weekend. This is the beginning of what is probably five to six months of hard slog," Elstone told reporters gathered in the auditorium of ASX's headquarters that Monday morning.
He could not have been more right.
JUNIOR PARTNER
Just as the Treasurer felt he was kept in dark about the deal, the two chief executives were taken by surprise five months later when Swan delivered a swift rebuke.
They had deployed lobbyists to the Australian capital of Canberra, other global exchanges had since announced their own plans for mergers, and they had even amended the terms of the original offer to include more Australian directors on the combined entity's board.
This had little sway on the Treasurer who on April 8 described his decision to reject the proposal as a "no-brainer". Swan, 56, who grew up in a country town in the northern state of Queensland, is a key Labor Party power broker representing the right wing. Among his list of reasons were concerns about relinquishing control of the nation's clearing and settlement systems, and Australian capital and jobs moving offshore.
"Becoming a junior partner to a smaller regional exchange through this deal would risk us losing many of our financial sector jobs," said Swan, the father of three.
"So let's be clear. This is not a merger, it's a takeover that would see Australia's financial sector become a subsidiary to a competitor in Asia."
The decision threw a spanner in the works for the wave of exchange consolidation sweeping the globe and has left a cloud hanging over the future of the SGX, which needs to find new partners or possibly be swallowed up itself.
It also opened old wounds about Australia's ambitions to become a regional financial center and raised a political storm domestically in Australia, where Swan's minority government relies on key independents to get laws passed.
Swan's political opponents and sources close to the exchanges said the official explanation was a smoke-screen for the real reasons the bid failed.
"A lot of them seemed to me to be quite emotional and xenophobic type issues," former ASX chairman Maurice Newman told a business lunch in Sydney on Tuesday, describing the failure as a lost opportunity.
The Singapore government's indirect 23 percent non-voting stake in SGX was top of the list, according to sources, although this was something the Australian government could never say publicly.
While investors warmed to the offer immediately, politically the deal appeared doomed from the start.
Even with the government's blessing, Australia's parliament was seen as the biggest hurdle, as SGX would also need other political parties on its side as well to remove a 15 percent ownership cap on the ASX.
Former Singapore Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew's famous warning in the 1980s that Australia could become the "poor white trash of Asia" still resonates with some lawmakers, who are suspicious of the Singapore's government indirect links to the SGX.
However, others argue a culture of bigotry and nationalism robbed Australia of a genuine opportunity to use Singapore as a gateway into Asia and boost its efforts to establish Australia as a regional financial hub.
TWISTS AND TURNS
In an unexpected twist, parliament never got to vote on the offer. Instead, word got out in late March that the government had already made its decision.
In a series of media leaks and statements, which analysts said raised questions about the independence of Australia's regulatory processes, it was clear by late March the bid was in its death throes.
At the time, Bocker and his advisers were focused on providing reams of documents and information to Australia's Foreign Investment Review Board (FIRB), a secretive panel of senior businessmen, who make formal recommendations to the Treasurer about whether a takeover is in Australia's "national interest".
FIRB had been expected to take another two months to weigh up the bid and Bocker and his advisers were settling in for the long haul when word came from his advisers in Australia on April 4. that something was up.
"The advice was that there could be something coming out in Australia. We weren't sure what it was," said a source with knowledge of the deal.
On April 5, the disconcerting news hit Bocker's desk.
FIRB had written to the SGX saying Swan was of the view that the bid should be rejected. Swan went public later that day, saying FIRB had advised him the takeover was not in the national interest and he "intended" to accept that advice.
FIRB was telling the SGX what Swan thought and Swan told the world what FIRB thought but no one was telling anyone what they actually thought themselves, Australian pundits noted.
Bocker quickly called a meeting at his office to discuss what should be SGX's next move and decided to go public with his views.
Bocker had launched the audacious cash-and-shares bid for ASX in October just 10 months into the top job at SGX. The slim 49-year-old Swede with a booming voice and a ready laugh is a glad-handing networker, a familiar character-type in the Australian business world. So the father of three children felt a little aggrieved by the tone of the rejection.
"Like us, he (Bocker) was very surprised on how strong the FIRB statement was," the source said.
The FIRB statement came after SGX and ASX had replied to more than 100 queries from the regulator relating to their merger proposal, sources with knowledge of the deal said.
Bocker later told reporters he was surprised because the letter contained no criticism of the proposed structure of the deal or the governance for the merged exchanges.
He was clearly annoyed, his mood not helped by technical issues with a chaotic conference call that afternoon as journalists and fund managers from around the globe scrambled to dial-in.
The rejection was a major blow, because the marathon-running Bocker had been discussing exchange consolidation with Elstone on and off for years.
Their relationship goes back to around 2000 when Elstone was running the Sydney Futures Exchange (SFE). Bocker was then chief operating officer at Scandinavian exchange OMX and was selling technology to the SFE for its next-generation clearing system.
The talk got serious around mid-2010 when new competition from alternative trading platforms ramped up pressure on exchanges globally to cut costs. Elstone's pending retirement was also a major factor in the marriage, as there would be no ego to stand in the way of Bocker's desire to run the combined company, the sources said.
Another key relationship was between ASX chairman David Gonski, who is on the board of Singapore Airlines. Singapore Air's CEO Chew Choon Seng is SGX chairman.
LOBBYING EFFORTS
Investment bankers, analysts and some media commentators were critical of the FIRB decision, and said the Treasurer needed to better explain the reasons for rejecting the deal.
"I think there should be more transparency on how the decision was reached. I think that would be in the national interest," Sydney University Economics and Business School Professor Alex Frino said.
"We have a decision by the FIRB, and a very short statement by the Treasurer. I think the market needs more information."
Others suggest the SGX was naive in the way it approached the deal. While Bocker had the ASX and its shareholders on board from the beginning, they failed to test the waters with the government or main opposition party beforehand.
The ASX hired senior lobbyists to pitch its case. David Gazard, who once was an adviser to the former conservative government's treasurer, and Cameron Milner, who has worked with current Prime Minister Julia Gillard, led the charge, while well-connected bankers at advisers UBS were also involved.
However, the lobbying may have started too late.
A majority of politicians and their advisers questioned by Reuters in the last week of March said they had little or no interaction with representatives from either exchange and the general feeling was that the deal was doomed.
SGX sources played this down, saying a lot of effort had gone into lobbying and they had confidence right up to the end of winning support from the government and the Opposition to get the deal through parliament.
Australia's minority government only holds power with the support of Greens and independent politicians and the SGX needed the opposition Liberals-National Coalition on board to get a deal through.
While the opposition's support for a deal was unclear, it didn't stop it from accusing the government of bungling the decision-making progress.
"Wayne Swan has turned Australia's international reputation into that of a third-world country. His bungled decision-making process has reflected poorly on Australia in what has been a complex commercial process," Australia's shadow treasurer, Joe Hockey said.
It was the first time the Australian government had rejected a major foreign takeover on national interest grounds since 2001, when Royal Dutch Shell's bid for Woodside Petroleum was blocked.
Swan said he would not oppose future deals if they protected Australia's financial architecture, enhanced the country's standing as a financial services center in Asia, boosted access to capital for Australian businesses and supported growth in high-quality financial services jobs.
However, the ASX is now seen as largely off limits.
The deal's rejection also puts Bocker in a bind as he seeks other merger partners. Bocker has long had a reputation as a deal-maker. He joined Swedish exchange operator OMX in 1986 and made his mark bringing together seven Nordic bourses to form OMX AB, which he led between 2003 and 2008, before selling out to NASDAQ.
"I don't see myself as a dealmaker, he told Reuters last month in an interview. "I see myself as an operator. I like building, changing and growing exchanges."
Analysts say he'll be back in the fray after nursing his wounds from the bruising Australian bout, but he may not be the hunter next time, but the prey.
Financial exchanges around the world are chasing cross-border deals to build scale and cut costs amid increasing competition from alternative trading platforms such as dark pools.
The Tokyo and Osaka exchanges are in talks. Deutsche Boerse is competing with a partnership of Nasdaq OMX Group and IntercontinentalExchange to buy NYSE Euronext. The London Stock Exchange is looking to combine with Canada's TMX Group.
The ASX experience has left Bocker and the SGX poorer and perhaps wiser. The Singapore exchange last week reported a lower-than-expected net profit, after booking S$12 million in costs related to the failed takeover bid. Now, analysts say, the talk in the market is that SGX itself is a takeover target.
Bocker says he'll pocket the lessons learned and continue to seek out partnerships and strategic alliances, though nothing tangible was on the horizon.
"Of course with the lessons learnt from ASX we will see what other things we can do, in line with other exchanges as well. So nothing specific."
(Additional reporting by James Grubel in Canberra; Editing by Bill Tarrant)

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Loyal
Who opened the floodgates?

S'pore's GIC has sold most of its Olympus shares

Reuters By Kevin Lim | Reuters – 9 hours ago

SINGAPORE, Nov 12 (Reuters) - Singapore sovereign wealth fund GIC said on Saturday it has sold most of its shares in troubled Japanese medical device and camera maker Olympus Corp.

GIC, which is the acronym for Government of Singapore Investment Corp, once held about 2 percent of Olympus, according to media reports.

"The majority of the investment was made in the midst of the global financial crisis. GIC disposed of almost all of its investments on first suspicion of possible wrongdoing in Olympus," the Singapore fund said in a statement.

The Singapore fund added it currently has only an insignificant holding under a portfolio managed by an external fund manager. (Reporting by Kevin Lim)
 
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Temasek's Pakistani bank NIB says CEO steps down

Temasek's Pakistani bank NIB says CEO steps down
Thu, Nov 24 2011

SINGAPORE/KARACHI, Nov 24 (Reuters) - The chief executive of NIB, the Pakistani bank controlled by Singapore's Temasek Holdings, has resigned and will be replaced by an interim CEO.

Khawaja Iqbal Hassan, who was instrumental in bringing Temasek as an investor in the Pakistani lender, will remain a non-executive member of NIB's board after stepping down as president and CEO, according to a Karachi Stock Exchange filing.

A Temasek spokesman confirmed the move.

"We also confirm that the board is proposing Aamir Zahidi as the interim CEO, pending regulatory approval," the spokesman said.

Temasek had a paper loss of around $400 million on NIB after investing $540 million in the bank, estimates by broker Invisor Securities and Thomson Reuters data showed.

NIB shares, which closed at 1.35 rupees a share on Thursday, are down by almost half this year. (Reporting by Saeed Azhar in SINGAPORE and Faisal Aziz in KARACHI; Editing by Kevin Lim)

© Thomson Reuters 2011. All rights reserved. Users may download and print extracts of content from this website for their own personal and non-commercial use only. Republication or redistribution of Thomson Reuters content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Thomson Reuters. Thomson Reuters and its logo are registered trademarks or trademarks of the Thomson Reuters group of companies around the world.

Thomson Reuters journalists are subject to an Editorial Handbook which requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests.

This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To order presentation-ready copies for distribution to colleagues, clients or customers, use the Reprints tool at the top of any article or visit: www.reutersreprints.com.
 
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