Nam Tai Property Inc. (VG)

Re David Gerard Goldberg QC
HK Court of First Instance, 9-Dec-2014
The Bar Association succeeds in preventing Mr Koo Ming Kown and Mr Tadao Murakami from using an overseas senior barrister at the Inland Revenue Board of Review.
Koo Ming Kown & Tadao Murakami v IRD
HK Court of Appeal, 9-Jun-2014
Re: Nam Tai Trading Co Ltd
HK Court of First Instance, 4-Jun-2012
The Inland Revenue Dept succeeds in its petition for a winding-up order against the company for unpaid taxes.
Inland Revenue v Nam Tai Group Management Ltd & Nam Tai Telecom (HK) Ltd
HK District Court, 29-Sep-2011
Both defendants are 100% subsidiaries of Nam Tai Electronics, Inc.
Nam Tai Trading Co Ltd v Inland Revenue Board of Review
HK Court of Appeal, 28-Oct-2009
SFC sanctions Mr Koo Ming Kown
SFC, 19-May-2009
Apology of Mr Koo Ming Kown, non-executive Chairman of NTEEP
Company announcement, 19-May-2009
...for trying to privatise NTEEP by winding it up
Proposed voluntary winding-up of NTEEP
Company announcement, 12-May-2009
...a privatisation offer by any other name
Takeovers Panel rules against re-opening offer for NTEEP
SFC, 21-Apr-2009
Accept Nam Tai's offer for NTEEP
It is now proven that the Dec-07 acquisitions by NTEEP (2633.HK) from its parent (NYSE:NTE), which we opposed, destroyed shareholder value. Today NTE has launched a privatisation offer at HK$1.50 per share. Webb-site.com editor David Webb holds over 10% of the float and intends to accept the offer - we explain why. (24-Feb-2009)
Koo Ming Kown v Next Media Ltd, Jimmy Lai Chee Ying and James To Kun Sun
HK District Court, 17-Feb-2009
JICT breaches free float rule
J.I.C. Technology (0987), the little sister of NTEEP, is also in breach of the 25% free float rule after purchases by NTE took it over 75%. (23-May-2007)
NTEEP breaches free float rule
NTEEP (2633) is now in breach of the 25% free float rule after purchases by its majority shareholder took it over 75%. (22-May-2007)
Nam Tai's Bids and Bounty
We look at the attempt by Nam Tai Electronics (NYSE:NTE) to privatise its HK-listed subsidiaries NTEEP (2633) at a 54% discount to the price at which it floated it last year, and J.I.C. Technology (0987). We also look at NTE's offer of a 1% "commission" to brokers who solicit their clients to accept the offer, conditional on the offer succeeding. By permitting this bounty, the SFC has at a stroke removed the possibility of brokers giving untainted independent advice to clients. That is not in the best interests of the market. (19-Nov-2005)
Nam Tai Electronics, Inc. v PriceWaterhouseCoopers
HK Court of First Instance, 3-Feb-2005

Sign up for our free newsletter

Recommend Webb-site to a friend

Copyright & disclaimer, Privacy policy

Back to top