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Olam to Spend $2 Billion From Saudi Sale on Lowering its Debt

Olam to Spend $2 Billion From Saudi Sale on Lowering its Debt

Bloomberg14-04-2025

Singaporean food conglomerate Olam Group Ltd. said it will use proceeds from the recent stake sale in its agri-business unit to pay off debt, sending its shares up 4% on Monday.
The group in February agreed to sell a controlling stake in Olam Agri to state-owned Saudi Agricultural & Livestock Investment Co. for up to $2.58 billion. Olam will spend about $2 billion of that to de-leverage its balance sheet, making it 'debt-free and self-sustaining', according to an emailed statement.

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Singapore's ‘Super Rich In Korea' star David Yong hit with fifth charge over S$61m promissory note scheme
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time16 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Singapore's ‘Super Rich In Korea' star David Yong hit with fifth charge over S$61m promissory note scheme

SINGAPORE, June 3 — Businessman David Yong, known for his appearance in Netflix's Super Rich In Korea, was handed a fifth charge involving more than 1,000 promissory notes linked to his company, Evergreen GRP Holdings (EGR). The 38-year-old Singaporean, whose full name is Yong Khung Lin, is the CEO of Evergreen Group Holdings and had previously faced four charges related to account falsification, according to a report published in The Straits Times today. His latest charge accuses him of consenting to the issuance of promissory notes between July 2023 and July 2024 that violated the Securities and Futures Act (SFA). According to the police, over S$61 million (RM201 million) was raised through more than 1,000 notes promising a 10 per cent annual interest, without lodging a required prospectus with the Monetary Authority of Singapore. A police spokesperson warned the public to be cautious of securities offers made without a registered prospectus, which must include sufficient information for investors to make informed decisions. Yong was first arrested on August 1, 2024, three months after appearing on the Netflix show. His initial charge, brought two days later, involved allegedly abetting Jolene Low Mong Han to falsify a tax invoice dated September 1, 2021, for a purported bulk sale of household items. Yong was subsequently charged in connection with two more falsified invoices dated December 16, 2021, related to the sale of furniture to separate entities under Evergreen Assets Management. On August 15, 2024, he faced a fourth charge, also for allegedly falsifying documents belonging to Evergreen GH. Yong's pre-trial conference is scheduled for June 5.

Las Vegas couple ran $2B luxury car scheme, gambled last $10K in poker tournament: police
Las Vegas couple ran $2B luxury car scheme, gambled last $10K in poker tournament: police

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Las Vegas couple ran $2B luxury car scheme, gambled last $10K in poker tournament: police

LAS VEGAS (KLAS) — A couple told investors they could net billions of dollars by selling luxury cars and boats to overseas buyers who police suspect never existed, according to documents the 8 News Now Investigators obtained. The revelations come from a 94-page arrest warrant for Jong Rhee, 45, and Neelufar Rhee, 34 — who Las Vegas Metro police took into custody on May 22. Each faces dozens of charges for allegedly persuading people to invest in the luxury items, saying 'the assets would be resold to overseas buyers at massive profit margins,' police said. However, detectives suspect no buyer ever existed. Jong Rhee allegedly promised investors that he could make money in the scheme to 'acquire high-value, exotic cars.' 'Wealthy clients in Singapore' would then buy the cars, delivering a $2.5 billion profit off of a $57 million investment because of that country's 'import restrictions,' police said. The couple conducted the alleged fraud scheme through two of their businesses: Twisted Twins Motorsports and Lusso Auto Spa, police said. State business records indicate that the Rhees are associated with businesses in Las Vegas and Henderson. Metro detectives suspect the couple netted $57 million 'for purchasing seven high-value motor vehicles by materially fraudulent misrepresentation,' documents said. In all, detectives list dozens of high-end and exotic cars and boats as part of the investigation, including models from Bugatti, Porsche and Rolls-Royce. One investor was allegedly promised a hefty return on an investment from the overseas purchases, documents said. Records show Jong Rhee 'never contacted anyone to sell [the vehicles in question] for $2 billion,' documents said. In one case involving a 2024 Rolls-Royce Spectre, Jong Rhee said he could receive $7.5 million for the vehicle with a value of $526,000, documents said. Another involving a $3.9 million boat involved a $13.5 million Singaporean purchase. Last July, Jong Rhee reportedly paid $60,000 for he and his wife to fly in a private plane to Missouri to go boating, documents said. The boat the pair and their friends rode on that weekend was supposed to be sold to 'Jong's overseas connection,' police said. Police also said the Rhees attempted to buy a bar and a home in Lake Havasu, Arizona, and traveled with an investor's money to California. In October, a judge signed off on a warrant to search the couple's $2 million Henderson home and businesses. As part of that search, police seized dozens of high-end cars. Detectives also obtained text messages between the couple, which they said made it 'evident that Jong and Neelufar were under intense pressure due to mounting debts, delayed payments, and unreliable business partners,' documents said. An April 2024 text from Jong Rhee involving outstanding payments on debts read: 'We r [sic] big trouble money,' according to police. Another text from Jong Rhee read, 'Right now, our lives are on the line.' The couple became 'so desperate for money' in 2024 that Jong Rhee bet their last $10,000 to gamble in the World Series of Poker, police said. 'Jong frequently gambled and played poker, especially when he and Neelufar struggled financially,' police said. 'He participated in tournaments similar to the World Series of Poker, which required significant buy-in amounts. Jong would often spend several days playing poker, further contributing to their financial distress. On July 8, 2024, while at a poker event, Jong told Neelufar, 'I don't think I've lost 99% 4 [sic] times in [my] whole life now 4 [sic] times in one month.' He believed that a big win would solve all of their money issues.' Both Rhees face 78 felony charges, including racketeering, money laundering, and forgery, records said. Based on redactions in court documents, it was not clear how many alleged victims were involved in the case. Both posted $100,000 bail, records said. They were not scheduled to return to court until June 9. Two other people, Crisfin Deguzman and John Baudhuin, also face charges connected to the case, records said. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Southeast Asia's tech startups are chasing the American dream
Southeast Asia's tech startups are chasing the American dream

Business Insider

time2 days ago

  • Business Insider

Southeast Asia's tech startups are chasing the American dream

Yoeven Khemlani knew he wanted to build a product for engineers like him. The Singaporean's friends told him they were spending tons of time maintaining code, web scraping, and translating their work for different markets. In July 2024, he launched JigsawStack, a company to create small models that could automate those tasks. One country — not his own — quickly became the source of his customers. "We saw a huge uptake of users and realized a lot of the early-stage customers that we got were from the US," Khemlani said. JigsawStack, which raised $1.5 million in pre-seed rounds from the venture capital firm Antler's Southeast Asia fund in October and February, is part of a growing group of Southeast Asian startups building products for US-based customers, rather than those in their backyard. For these software startups, the US's rising isolationism isn't threatening their customer base — yet. But sweeping tariffs on China may push up the cost of hardware they need to import into the US, such as servers. "Traditionally, Southeast Asian startups honed in on local or regional markets to solve unique, homegrown challenges," said Jussi Salovaara, a cofounder of Antler who leads investments in Asia. The ride-hailing apps Grab and GoJek — two of the region's best-known startups, now publicly listed — are examples of how founders in the early 2010s built for local needs. "However, as the ecosystem matures, founders are now setting their sights on the US, encouraged by a blend of opportunity and necessity," Salovaara said, adding that he'd seen more of these US-focused startups in the past three years in Southeast Asia. Southeast Asia is growing, but it doesn't have the US's firepower Southeast Asia, a group of 11 countries east of the Indian subcontinent and south of China, has seen skyrocketing economic growth over the past decade. Since 2015, the region's GDP has climbed more than 62% to $4.12 trillion, boosted by a growing middle and upper class. Between 2015 and 2021, the number of venture capital deals within the region more than tripled to 1,800, PitchBook data shows. Activity peaked in 2021 — a similar pattern to startup funding globally. Despite the region's growth, more Southeast Asia startups are choosing to focus on building products for the US, not for those around them. Founders and business experts note that the American market is more concentrated, more mature, and less price sensitive, all of which make it an attractive playing ground for new entrants. Plus, the US is leading in artificial intelligence, the major driver of today's global tech industry. "We're in an AI-first world where currently the US is at the epicenter of driving groundbreaking advancements," said Shailendra Singh, a managing director with Peak XV, the VC firm previously known as Sequoia Capital India & Southeast Asia. "This," he added, "is why we put in a lot of focus and effort on building global go-to-market operating teams in the US." And American businesses are happy to have them. "SEA startups are often positioned to offer high-quality, cost-competitive solutions that can undercut US-based alternatives, making them appealing to American businesses in need of cost-effective innovation," Antler's Salovaara said. To be sure, the model isn't unique to Southeast Asia. Nataliya Wright, an entrepreneurship professor at Columbia Business School, researched startups founded from 2000 to 2015 for a forthcoming paper on scaling. She found that software startups from small countries in Europe, for instance, typically focused on the US from the get-go. Southeast Asian countries such as Thailand and Vietnam, however, are considered midsize markets, with populations in the tens of millions. Startups from midsize markets tended to start with a local focus, assuming there would be enough customers. "A US orientation," Wright told Business Insider, "would suggest a departure from that model." 11 unique markets Working only within the region is tough. Southeast Asia is home to a huge diversity of languages, business practices, and household incomes. "You're spending five times more because you're entering five different markets," Khemlani, the JigsawStack founder, said about working in the region. The US and tech hubs like San Francisco allow startups to find an abundance of customers in one place, or at least in one country. "We don't have the resources to do two streams of marketing," Khemlani said. Having some American customers is good for fundraising, too, said Wright, the Columbia Business School professor. This is because of a bias called "foreign discounting" — VCs based in startup hubs such as Silicon Valley overlook or undervalue startups founded elsewhere, Wright said. When foreign startups show they have US customers, it helps cancel out that bias and could give them a leg up in future fundraising rounds. VCs say founders from the region have advantages. Singh, the Peak XV managing director, said Indian and Southeast Asian startups often have an underdog mindset. "They feel a startup in Silicon Valley is more polished and has better access to capital and talent, so they want to overcompensate by working harder, learning faster, and often they're understated and very hungry for success," he said. Hotbed for innovation Realfast is a Singaporean Peak XV-backed startup that builds AI agents for IT systems. Its cofounder, Sidu Ponnappa, has found that the US is the deepest market for its product. "Everything from deal velocity to deal size operates at a completely different level in the US," Ponnappa said. "Can you do the same thing for other markets? Yes, but it's always lower margin." Guan Dian, who heads the Asia Pacific operations of Patsnap, a software maker for research and development projects that's backed by Vertex Ventures, said the company's founders always thought the US would be a priority market. While the startup has customers in 50 countries, more than half of its 5,000 customers are in the US. She said the company refined its branding to emphasize AI-powered features for industries such as biotech and advanced manufacturing, which dominate US patent filings. Cost consciousness among Southeast Asian customers is another reason founders are reaching abroad. "Southeast Asia is a little bit more price sensitive, and we tend to get a bit more into negotiation," Khemlani said. Cheaper labor means local customers try low-tech solutions or building themselves first, but that's starting to change as AI models get more complex and expensive, Khemlani said. 'Should we move our headquarters to America?' Founders don't want to fully decamp to the US, though, thanks to the ease of doing business in places such as Singapore. For startups including Multiplier, an HR platform backed by Tiger Global and Peak XV, Singapore's strong geopolitical relations with virtually every country are a big advantage over the US. "We do business with China and Taiwan, we do business with India and Pakistan, we do business with America and China," said Sagar Khatri, Multiplier's CEO and cofounder. "We've evaluated time and time again: Should we move our headquarters to America? And the answer has always been no," Khatri said. The founders who spoke with BI also touted Singapore's tax policy — it doesn't tax capital gains — and government grants for tech companies. Some startups are splitting their people, moving one cofounder to the US while the other stays in Southeast Asia. For JigsawStack, being in the US is essential for networking. Khemlani, the founder, spent six months in the US last year and moved permanently this year to scale the startup. "You can't sell to the US when you're not there," he said. "Just going for an event or a hackathon in the US makes such a big difference in your sales."

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