Rare public protest flags investor anger in Hyflux slump

Bloomberg

A rare public protest in Singapore underscored mounting anger among investors set to suffer sharp losses in one of the country’s highest-profile corporate debt restructurings.
The catastrophic slump of the once-vaunted water and power company, Hyflux Ltd, has stunned debtholders, who stand to lose about 90 percent.
About 400 to 500 of those individual investors gathered in a downtown park known as the Speaker’s Corner, carrying placards and posters.
“There are a lot of questions that need answers,” said Ray Ho, a 65-year-old retiree who has invested in the company’s perpetual bonds. Investments were “a leap of faith.
These are people’s life savings. How can you expect retail investors that are not-so-sophisticated to make the distinctions?”
Wendy Yap, 48, said she put in about $52,000 in Hyflux shares in 2014 and left her investments untouched for at least three years in the belief that utility companies were cash cows.
“It’s already a gone case,” she said, adding that her husband had also made a separate investment in the company.
At the heart of the debacle is Tuaspring, Hyflux’s desalination and power plant that was heralded as one of the “national taps” for an island that had long depended on importing water and harvesting rainwater for survival. Tuaspring was opened to great fanfare in September 2013, but losses snowballed after its gas-turbine power plant started selling excess capacity in 2016 to the power grid, which had a glut of electricity caused by liberalisation of the market.
Some of the protesters’ placards called for authorities such as the Monetary Authority of Singapore to start an investigation and Hyflux’s auditor KPMG LLP to speak up on the issue.
Hyflux’s stumble has spotlighted the plight of about 34,000 retail investors who were lured by the promise of a 6 percent annual return forever from a company that seemed to have a gold seal of government approval.
Investors who bought into S$900 million of Hyflux’s perpetual securities have been angered by the steep haircut that would be imposed by the company under its S$2.8 billion restructuring plan.

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