Yangzijiang Financial to anchor $100 million fund of firm led by ex-CEO Vincent Toe
The fund will invest exclusively in Singapore SMEs, with Yangzijiang Financial chief executive Ren Yuanlin saying they have "exceptional growth potential" with the right capital and strategic support.
SINGAPORE - Yangzijiang Financial will be the anchor investor in a $100 million fund by ICH Asset Management (ICHAM), which is led by the Singapore-listed company's former chief executive, Vincent Toe.
The fund will invest exclusively in Singapore's small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), and is expecting to start doing so in September, Yangzijiang Financial announced in an Aug 18 filing with the Singapore Exchange.
It did not specify the exact sum it would invest in the fund.
The initial pipeline of opportunities include companies in the technology, healthcare, sustainability and consumer-services sectors.
SMEs 'form the backbone of the economy and, with the right capital and strategic support, harbour exceptional growth potential for investors', said Yangzijiang Financial's chief executive, Ren Yuanlin.
'By anchoring this fund with ICHAM, we are signalling our long-term commitment to the local equity market and believe that Singapore offers a unique opportunity for investors who are prepared to take a focused and disciplined approach,' he added.
Mr Toe, who is managing director of ICHAM, said that the strategy is to identify companies with clear growth trajectories and continue to support them in the public markets.
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The fund will back SMEs from before they undergo an initial public offering, through to market entry and beyond, including strategic placements after listing.
'This flexible strategy will enable both the group and ICHAM to capture value-accretive opportunities throughout the growth milestones,' said Yangzijiang Financial.
'By focusing on Singapore's small to mid-cap segments, the (fund) endeavours to address the lack of large institutional capital and research coverage in this space, unlocking growth potential in an underserved area of the equity market,' it added.
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Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox Official figures released on July 30 show the rate of divorces rising faster than that of marriages in the first half of 2025. – When entrepreneur Guo Jia's marriage ended in 2021, she took to Chinese social media to share how she navigated the ups and downs of life as a divorcee and single mother. 'From day one, I decided I would be open about my divorce because there is no shame. Divorce is something I went through, not something I'm to blame for,' the 40-year-old Beijing native who has an eight-year-old son told The Straits Times. Her candid social media posts about navigating life after divorce struck a chord with women facing similar struggles. By May 2024, she had channelled that momentum into founding Mei Club, a women-only network in Beijing offering legal advice, parenting support for single mothers and emotional mentorship. 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