Today-Feb 7

After years of struggling to emerge from the shadows of regional rivals, Singapore Exchange is looking to establish itself as the hub for blank-cheque firms, riding on regulatory overhaul, support by state firms, and a tech boom in its backyard. Encouraged by the flurry of Southeast Asian tech start-ups seeking funding and the bourse’s revised rules, Singapore could list up to a dozen special-purpose acquisition companies (SPACs) within the next 12-18 months, bankers, venture capitalists, and analysts say. A key test for SGX will come when such companies, also known as blank-cheque or shell firms, have to seal merger targets within two years, a “de-SPACing” process already weighing on US deals as hundreds of SPACS chase targets. Analysts say Singapore faces a challenge to get its traditionally risk-averse investors interested in a new asset class, especially after SGX has met with limited success in its previous attempts to shore up its equity market. In contrast, large international institutions have turned to Hong Kong for blockbuster equity listings over the past decade. The attraction is that they are simpler and typically more rewarding for startups than an IPO. Read more at: https://www.todayonline.com/singapore/singapore-bets-niche-spac-listings-capture-tech-boom-1812246