21-04-2015, 02:11 PM
(This post was last modified: 21-04-2015, 02:16 PM by desmondxyz.)
(21-04-2015, 11:44 AM)specuvestor Wrote:(20-04-2015, 05:31 PM)desmondxyz Wrote: Anyone know more about capital reduction? how does it work? Who is at the loss under capital reduction?
There are usually 3 broad reasons to do capital reduction. In Singapore IIRC it needs court approval.
1) Too much capital due to high amount of retained earnings and capital repayment do not attract tax.
This form of capital repayment actually has cashflow to the shareholders and not just purely accounting.
2) Restructuring of a weak financials by reducing capital for exisitng shareholders and most probably to increase capital soon via placement, rights debt to equity swap, etc.
3) Erase losses
This enables the company to pay dividend going forward if it starts making money instead of recouping the losses first before being able to pay out.
From Finance 101 perspective, there is little difference because it is just accounting entries from capital to accumulated losses. But practically the signaling is that management longer term view is being crystalised.
What I don't know is whether there is any tax impact if any adjustment from tax loss carried forward
FuYu seems to be doing seemingly contradictory both 1) & 3) at same time, but this is a 20 year old listco with depreciated assets.
The company itself accumulated so much loss (6 years loss for the last 10 years) and yet still can accumulate so much cash.....