SIC to take no further action against Popiah King Sam Goi on breach of takeover code

SIC to take no further action against Popiah King Sam Goi on breach of takeover code


Goi says he misunderstood the provisions of the code; the council is also factoring in his cooperation and remedial actions

[SINGAPORE] The Securities Industry Council (SIC) will take no further action against PSC Corporation’s Sam Goi for his 2023 breach of a rule in the Singapore code on takeovers and mergers, it said on Tuesday (Apr 7).

Goi is the executive chairman of mainboard-listed PSC Corporation , a manufacturer and distributor of fast-moving consumer goods; he is also chairman of food manufacturerTee Yih Jia, known for its popiah skins.

Rule 14.1(a) states that when a person acquires shares which – taken together with shares held or acquired by a person acting in concert with them – carry 30 per cent or more of the voting rights of a company, the person (or persons) must immediately extend offers to other shareholders.

PSC Corp carried out share buybacks between May and October 2023, having obtained a mandate for this from its shareholders at its annual general meeting on Apr 28, 2023. The mandate was valid until Apr 25, 2024.

The move increased Goi’s shareholding to 30.22 per cent from 29.97 per cent.

Under the share buyback exemption, directors and persons acting in concert with them are not to acquire shares from the point when the announcement of the buy-back proposal is imminent.

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They are also not to do so before:

  • The share buyback mandate expires, or
  • The date on which the company announces it has bought back such number of shares as authorised by shareholders at the latest general meeting, or if it has decided to cease buying back its shares.

However, on Dec 4, 2023, Goi purchased shares that increased his shareholding to 30.23 per cent although the share buyback mandate had not expired, and the company had not announced that it had completed or ceased its move to do the buyback.

With the 30.23 per cent share holding, Goi breached the share buyback exemption conditions. Accordingly, since he did not make a general offer for the company, he broke Rule 14.1(a).

Goi said that he had misunderstood the restrictions regarding the share buyback exemption and did not know that his share purchases on Dec 4, 2023 would breach the rules.

However, in consultation with SIC, he announced a mandatory offer on Jul 10, 2025, which turned unconditional on Aug 7, 2025. This move would have given shareholders the opportunity to accept the offer for shares they held on Dec 4, 2023.

Goi also offered to pay the difference between the offer and sale price, and used the higher offer price of S$0.40 a share than the purchase price of S$0.36 a share.

SIC said it “considered (Goi’s) submissions that he had misunderstood the relevant Code provisions, and that there was no deliberate attempt to contravene the Code”.

Goi also voluntarily disclosed details of his share purchases after the buyback, and met disclosure obligations as a director under the Securities and Futures Act.

Considering that, along with his cooperation during the its review of the breach and in implementing the remedial actions, SIC decided against taking further action against him.

Shares of the counter closed trading down 3.6 per cent or S$0.015 to S$0.405 before the update.

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Liam Redmond

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