iFAST

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did someone ponder why of so many big brokering firms out there in the market, Raffles Family Office only chose to partner with iFast in China?

did anyone know how big the market is in China? Traditionally, most Chinese in China only buys property as investment...

https://www.businesstimes.com.sg/wealth-...-expansion

https://fundselectorasia.com/raffles-fo-...ter-china/

Raffles FO makes key hire for Greater China
Latest News
By Francis Nikolai Acosta, 19 May 20

The move comes after the firm decided earlier this year to put on hold plans of developing its businesses in China and Hong Kong as the coronavirus outbreak was peaking in the mainland.


Hong Kong-based Raffles Family Office (RFO) has appointed Stella Kong in the newly created role of managing director for Greater China, according to a statement from the firm.

Kong, who will split her time between Hong Kong and Shanghai, will lead the firm’s business expansion in Greater China. She will report to Chiman Kwan, the firm’s founder and CEO.
Kong was managing director and chief marketing officer at Deyu Family Office in Hong Kong, where she joined in 2017, according to her Linkedin profile. Before that, she was managing director and market group head for China at Credit Suisse and deputy regional head of private banking for Greater China and North Asia at Standard Chartered Bank.
Kong’s hire follows after RFO established in October a Shanghai-based joint venture firm with I-Fast Corporation. It also has an office in Taiwan, where it started operations last year.
Hong Kong remains the firm’s largest office with about 35 staff, including relationship managers and investment professionals. The majority of the firm’s assets are also sourced from Hong Kong, particularly from offshore mainland Chinese clients.
Elsewhere, it has an office in Singapore, where it set up an office in 2018. The Singapore team has nearly 20 staff, including relationship managers, one portfolio manager and operational support.
Re-shifting back to China?
Kong’s hire comes just after the firm said in March that it was shifting its focus to Singapore as the coronavirus outbreak was peaking in China.
“We have everything registered now in China and have also set-up our We Chat page,” Jaydee Lin, Singapore-based managing partner at RFO, said at the time. “But because of the Covid-19 outbreak, everything has been put on hold at the moment.”
However, business activity is slowly resuming in the mainland, and the firm has decided to resume on its expansion plans in China.
“RFO has been closely observing the situation in mainland China. With business activities resuming in the mainland, RFO is also moving ahead with its expansion plans, which include bringing in talent,” a spokesman for RFO said.
Since March, the firm made several senior hires in Singapore, including managing director and relationship manager Marvin Koh, who was previously from DBS, and Simon Lints, who was hired to drive the firm’s business expansion in Southeast Asia, including Thailand and Malaysia.
[I am not here to promote any stocks. Please always do your own research before embarking on any investment decision. I will not be liable for any of your own decisions. Your use of any information or materials is entirely at your own risk. It is your responsibility to ensure that any products, services or information meet your specific requirements. I do not produce material which meets the objectives of any specific financial and risk profile of investors.]
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https://links.sgx.com/1.0.0/corporate-an...142f9a286c

Ifast will offer a unique business model that no other players can do . It has the full suite of ecosystem in place ....

Beating the banks at their own turf ...



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[I am not here to promote any stocks. Please always do your own research before embarking on any investment decision. I will not be liable for any of your own decisions. Your use of any information or materials is entirely at your own risk. It is your responsibility to ensure that any products, services or information meet your specific requirements. I do not produce material which meets the objectives of any specific financial and risk profile of investors.]
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What is the story about this company? Care to write a summary about its buy point and potential?
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Just need to refer to my previous postings ... there were many who poured cold water along the way (when ifast was only 80 cents .... )

But this is really just the beginning of a new dawn for ifast in its transformation journey ...

Like I said before , its target of $100bil AUA is not far fetched . Its current AUA is only a meager $10bil AUA ....

Today market cap is only about $350mil... even if someone offers $1bil to buy over , don’t think controlling shareholders will let go ...


Please do some DIY research into the whole value chain of wealth management and the emergence of family offices .... then u will start to realize why ifast is beating the banks at their own turf ...

Look at China . Most of the people only know physical property investment . Family offices are making inroads into the wealth industry in China ....

One can only imagine how big the market is for ifast ...


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[I am not here to promote any stocks. Please always do your own research before embarking on any investment decision. I will not be liable for any of your own decisions. Your use of any information or materials is entirely at your own risk. It is your responsibility to ensure that any products, services or information meet your specific requirements. I do not produce material which meets the objectives of any specific financial and risk profile of investors.]
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https://research.sginvestors.io/2020/06/...06-19.html

Conservative price target of $1.65...


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[I am not here to promote any stocks. Please always do your own research before embarking on any investment decision. I will not be liable for any of your own decisions. Your use of any information or materials is entirely at your own risk. It is your responsibility to ensure that any products, services or information meet your specific requirements. I do not produce material which meets the objectives of any specific financial and risk profile of investors.]
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Time to reap some profits?

one of the directors have been selling.
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LCC bought at $1.1 .....


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Full year eps would probably come in at about 6 to 7 cents. Assuming conservative PE of 30, one can easily arrive at the justifiable price range of about $1.8 to $2.1, before factoring in the digital bank license.

If banking license is secured, share price would probably head to $3....


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Bondsupermart to refine bonds market with fintech solutions

SINGAPORE (June 22): Bonds have been favoured by investors for their promise of a steady, recurring stream of income for investors. However, relative to stocks quoted on a stock exchange, the bond market has been less accessible for retail investors.

As an asset class, bonds are generally traded among institutional and accredited investors. A typical investor would need to reach out to their brokerage’s relationship manager, who’d in turn obtain information and prices from the treasury desk before placing the trade on behalf of an investor.


To tackle this seemingly opaque and inaccessible market, wealth management fintech platform iFAST Corporation launched Bondsupermart in 2015 to provide investors with a one-stop solution for information on bonds.

Bondsupermart is a content aggregation website that is primarily focused on the Asian bond markets, and aims to become the information portal of choice for bond investors around the globe.

The portal first started with a Singapore-centric range of bonds and research but quickly expanded to carve out an Asian niche for itself, incorporating bonds around the region into both its research and platform.

“From our first day, we were clear in our mission to provide a new alternative to investors, one
that focuses on the availability of extensive research for all investors, and capitalises on
technology to make the process transparent, efficient and useful for investors,” says iFAST’s chairman and CEO Lim Chung Chun.



iFAST, under Lim, is known as a company with the knack for spotting market trends and new ways to capture new growth. It is known for famously creating the Fundsupermart portal that has shaken up the unit trusts distribution industry; it has moved into wealth management; it is bidding for a digital banking license.

Bondsupermart is making its mark in the bonds industry valued by the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association at US$102.8 trillion – a big “untapped opportunity when it comes to the segment for individual investors”, says Lim.

Revamping the bonds market

Currently, information on stocks and exchange traded funds (ETFs) can be obtained easily from a simple Google search, where an abundance of information, research and views turn up instantaneously.

Yet, information on bonds, even basic ones, are only made available for investors through relationship managers, dealers or advisers. As far as credit research or reports are concerned, only professional data providers can offer these to investors. But this comes at a hefty price tag in the form of subscriptions that will eat into the margins of most investors.

With Bondsupermart, investors are able to access a wealth of information on up-to-date bond market information as well as third party updates and commentaries, which are offered to them for free. Through this, investors are offered a transparent experience when trading bonds.

Bondsupermart offers a suite of customised tools to aid in bond pricing calculations, performance tracking and bond comparison. With the click of a button, investors are able to access a ‘factsheet’ about each bond which covers basic information such as the issue size, coupon rate, date of maturity and any call or deferred interest payment features.

Apart from breaking down fundamental information into “easy to understand” pieces of information for investors, Bondsupermart also introduced Bond Express in 2016 in order to further improve the market for investors.



While corporate bonds typically trade in lots of US$200,000 each, Bond Express allows investors to trade in much more digestible lot sizes as small as US$5,000 each. This allows investors to diversify their portfolios and trade more efficiently.

Tailored fintech solutions for investors

According to Lim, greater accessibility and financial literacy has always been the end-goal for Bondsupermart. “By digitalising the information and processes for financial institutions in our region, we will be able to attain a greater outreach and begin to make trading of bonds online the new norm,” he says.

Bondsupermart takes pride in understanding clients’ needs and expectations, as well as their current systems. After a client’s requirements and Bondsupermart’s corresponding services have been laid out, the team will then set up workgroups with IT teams for the integration process.

Currently, Bondsupermart offers two unique solutions. It provides APIs and data feeds for bond information and transactions, which will be integrated into the financial institution’s mobile app or online platform to allow users seamless access to the bonds. Through this, investors can easily browse through the products instead of going through the hassle of calling or emailing their relationship managers for information.

Bondsupermart also offers a web-based platform catered for front to back offices which enables relationship managers to easily retrieve information and requests for quotes easily. With this platform, dealers will be able to communicate directly with relationship managers, access data and conduct dealing activities. Market makers, too, will be able to retrieve information and enter prices through the platform, while operations and settlement teams will be able to easily identify and track trades, and match payments where the need arises.

The Bondsupermart team will accompany its clients through the User Acceptance Tests, with dedicated Business Development and IT teams on standby for maintenance thereafter.

Bondsupermart is now looking to work with financial institutions to help them build competitively-priced fintech solutions, in order to make bonds trading more accessible to every investor. Potential partners include banks and other brokerage firms who can integrate these fintech solutions into their internal systems, or, as mobile applications for investors.


A growing market

Although Asian markets such as Singapore’s are lauded by investors for their stability and attractive returns, Lim notes that there are “numerous differences” between Asian bond markets and more developed markets such as those in the US or Europe.

Lim observes how manual over-the-counter (OTC) transactions typically conducted in Asian bond markets impedes operational efficiency, price discovery, and liquidity, leading to wider trading spreads and settlement risk. But things are changing for the better.

Looking ahead, Lim says recent advancements in infrastructure and technology, particularly the move towards electronic trading, pave the way for an “exciting” future for the bond market.

“These challenges also highlight the immense growth potential for the Asian bond market, given that trading volume and market size have grown steadily in recent years despite the efficiencies highlighted,” he says.

“As we have seen how the market for stocks has grown since online trading became available, we can already visualise the immense possibilities that online trading for bonds holds,” he adds.

With the Covid-19 pandemic, working from home arrangements and remote meetings have become the new norm. Companies are being pushed to accelerate the digitalisation of their workflow and processes.

With ‘Innovation’ as one of iFAST’s three DNA values, Bondsupermart is the latest exhibition of its continued efforts to disrupt the investment space in terms of building competitively-priced solutions for investors.
[I am not here to promote any stocks. Please always do your own research before embarking on any investment decision. I will not be liable for any of your own decisions. Your use of any information or materials is entirely at your own risk. It is your responsibility to ensure that any products, services or information meet your specific requirements. I do not produce material which meets the objectives of any specific financial and risk profile of investors.]
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(10-06-2020, 07:25 PM)Curiousparty Wrote: did someone ponder why of so many big brokering firms out there in the market, Raffles Family Office only chose to partner with iFast in China?

Why did they choose iFast?
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