Tuesday 25 August 2015

Com­pany’s cash­flow proves profit is real



Goh: ‘Every­thing is in or­der. The com­pany has been grow­ing since the as­sets were in­jected.’

The Star Biz, 26 Aug 2015

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysian bil­lion­aire Goh Peng Ooi said the board of Sil­ver­lake Axis Ltd has de­lib­er­ated over the is­sues raised in an anony­mous blog and found no is­sue with the tech com­pany’s ac­counts.

He said Sil­ver­lake has en­gaged the Sin­ga­pore Stock Ex­change (SGX) to ex­plain its side of the story and will hire a third-party con­sul­tant to go through the data again.

“Every­thing is in or­der. Thecom­pany has been grow­ing sincethe as­sets were in­jected,” he toldStarBiz yes­ter­day. Goh, with a 67%stake in Sil­ver­lake, is the founder and group ex­ec­u­tive chair­man ofthe com­pany. Sil­ver­lake shares, listed on SGX, tum­bled 24% on Fri­day to 63.5 cents af­ter a 42-page re­port en­ti­tled “The Un­be­liev­able Fi­nan­cial Alchemy of Sil­ver­lake Axis” and au­thored by “ra­zor99” was re­leased on Thurs­day night. Sil­ver­lake’s stock has been vol­un­tar­ily sus­pended from trad­ing as of yes­ter­day.

The re­port placed a 29-cent tar­get on Sil­ver­lake shares, as it al­leges that Goh op­er­ated a large group of com­pa­nies, col­lec­tively known as the Sil­ver­lake group, which en­com­passed a com­plex web of murky, pri­vate com­pa­nies con­nected to the listed en­tity. It said the listed com­pany en­gaged in ex­ten­sive re­lated-party trans­ac­tions with Goh through these pri­vate com­pa­nies, while dis­clo­sure of these trans­ac­tions lacked clar­ity.

The re­port added that therewere nu­mer­ous red flags and am­ple ev­i­dence sug­gest­ing that Gohhas used these re­lated-party trans­ac­tions to in­flate Sil­ver­lake’s re­ported re­sults.
It said the listed com­pany also has loss-mak­ing re­lated par­ties, which em­ploy a large num­ber of Sil­ver­lake group em­ploy­ees.

“Th­ese hid­den en­ti­ties are undis­closed con­tin­gent li­a­bil­i­ties to the listed com­pany.” The re­port said there were large re­lated-party Sil­ver­lake-group pri­vate com­pa­nies that were loss-mak­ing with neg­a­tive share­holder eq­uity. Th­ese com­pa­nies only con­tinue to op­er­ate with an ex­plicit guar­an­tee of fi­nan­cial sup­port from Goh. The re­port noted that these en­ti­ties were known to have on­go­ing re­lated-party trans­ac­tions with the listed com­pany and they have a com­bined cost base al­most as large as the listed com­pany, with al­most as many em­ploy­ees.

The re­port noted that these en­ti­ties were be­ing used to flat­ter the listed com­pany’s prof­itabil­ity, whereas in re­al­ity, they were con­tin­gent li­a­bil­i­ties that should be dis­closed in the an­nual re­port.
Goh dis­puted the al­le­ga­tions and said the struc­ture of Sil­ver­lake group was com­plex, ow­ing to the na­ture of its busi­ness and the his­tory of the com­pany.

He said rules and reg­u­la­tions were fol­lowed and that the group has made proper dis­clo­sure in the cor­po­rate ex­er­cises it un­der­takes. He said that as a MSC-sta­tuscom­pany, Sil­ver­lake had to en­sure that its ac­counts were proper andin or­der. Fail­ure to do so would have meant a big penalty be­ing levied on the com­pany, as it ben­e­fits from tax breaks as a MSC-sta­tus com­pany.

“If you want the tax ex­emp­tion, you must have good ac­count­ing,” he said.

Sil­ver­lake re­leased its full-year fi­nan­cial re­sults on Mon­day.

In its lat­est fi­nan­cial year ended June 30, 2015, Sil­ver­lake posted a net profit of RM 282.7mil.
Goh pointed out that for the year, Sil­ver­lake recorded an op­er­at­ing cash­flow of RM 305.5mil, out of which it paid RM 285.8mil as div­i­dends.

He said if Sil­ver­lake had posted just a pa­per or in­flated profit, the com­pany would not be able to pay out such a quan­tum of div­i­dends in cash.

“We div­i­dend out most of our prof­its,” he said.

Goh said he took the crit­i­cism in his stride, as the lines of re­spon­si­bil­ity were clear within the com­pany.

He said the board of di­rec­tors had con­trol over the run­ning of the com­pany and his pas­sion and in­ter­est were skewed to­wards re­search.

“My char­ac­ter is more aca­demic and I don’t care what oth­ers think about me. But I do take peo­ple’s crit­i­cism as an ed­u­ca­tion process,” he said.

“It’s my re­spon­si­bil­ity as a sup­plier and ma­jor­ity share­holder tode­velop soft­ware. The list­ing sideof the busi­ness is left to theboard.”



Pe­nang-born Goh, 61, made it to the Forbes Malaysia rich list at num­ber nine this year, with an es­ti­mated net worth of US $1.6bil (RM 6.7bil). Although listed on the Main Board of the SGX, Sil­ver­lake is head­quar­tered in Pe­tal­ing Jaya.