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[SINGAPORE] The following companies saw new developments that may affect trading of their securities on Thursday (May 8).
DBS: The bank’s net profit for its first quarter fell due to higher tax expenses from the implementation of the 15 per cent global minimum tax, it said on Thursday. Net profit for the three months ended Mar 31, 2025, stood at S$2.9 billion, 2 per cent lower than the S$2.95 billion from the year-ago period. The earnings beat the S$2.87 billion consensus forecast in a Bloomberg survey of eight analysts. Shares of DBS closed 0.5 per cent or S$0.23 lower at S$42.76 on Wednesday.
Riverstone: The glove manufacturer on Wednesday posted a profit of RM56.4 million (S$17.2 million) for the quarter ended Mar 31, 2025, sliding 21.8 per cent from RM72.2 million in the corresponding year-ago period. This resulted in an earnings per share of RM0.0381, compared with RM0.0487 a year ago. The lower profit is despite revenue rising 1.1 per cent to RM252.3 million, from RM249.5 million, said the company. The group’s top line for the quarter rose due to higher sales volume for healthcare gloves and stable contribution from the cleanroom gloves segment. However, higher raw material costs and the depreciation of the US dollar against the Malaysian ringgit contributed to gross profit margin dropping 6.5 percentage points to 32.6 per cent in this quarter, said Riverstone. Shares of Riverstone closed at S$0.935 on Wednesday, up S$0.005 or 0.5 per cent, before the announcement.
Lendlease Global Commercial Real Estate Investment Trust (LReit): The trust on Wednesday posted a positive retail rental reversion of 10.4 per cent for the third quarter ended Mar 31, 2025, despite a “softer” retail landscape. The performance came even as it recorded a 0.2 per cent decline in visitation and a 5.1 per cent drop in tenant sales year-to-date. Both were affected by softer retail conditions, outbound tourism and weakness in sectors including shoes and bags, and fashion and accessories. However, LReit’s retail portfolio achieved a strong occupancy rate of 99.5 per cent and a healthy tenant retention rate by net lettable area of 87.9 per cent, the manager said. Units of Lendlease Global Commercial Reit closed unchanged at S$0.515 on Wednesday, before the release of the business update.
Amara, Ban Leong Technologies: Hotel group Amara and technology products distributor Ban Leong Technologies on Wednesday separately announced that they have appointed independent financial advisers (IFAs) as they mull offers to be taken private. Amara has appointed W Capital Markets as its IFA for a voluntary conditional general offer from a consortium led by property company Hwa Hong. The offeror, a special-purpose vehicle called DRC Investments, launched the offer on Apr 28 at S$0.895 a share. The offer is final and values Amara at S$514.6 million. Meanwhile, Ban Leong has chosen Asian Corporate Advisors as its IFA as it considers a cash offer from video game distributor Epicsoft Asia, an indirect wholly owned subsidiary of Nasdaq-listed GCL Global. The offer of S$0.6029 per share to Ban Leong’s shareholders comes as GCL Global “seeks to integrate Ban Leong’s distribution and vendor network with (its) digital capabilities and software portfolio”, GCL Global chief executive Sebastian Toke told The Business Times in a recent interview. Amara’s shares were flat at S$0.885 on Wednesday and Ban Leong shares added S$0.005 or 0.8 per cent to close at S$0.595 on Wednesday.
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