End of the road for Hyflux as High Court okays winding up of water treatment firm

micromachine

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SINGAPORE - Beleaguered water treatment firm Hyflux has finally reached the end of the road after the High Court approved its winding up on Wednesday afternoon (July 21).

The move followed a three-year-long restructuring attempt that involved a number of surprising twists.

The ruling also means the long-suffering 34,000 retail investors holding Hyflux perpetual securities and preference shares (PnP) and who were owed $900 million will likely end up with nothing.

More at https://www.straitstimes.com/busine...x-high-court-oks-winding-up-of-water-treatmen
 
Eager to find out what the Hyflux building at Bendemeer Road will become... boutique hotel? :biggrin:
 
Seems like many of these female CEOs who were puffed up by the fawning media as feminist role models have fallen from grace. :biggrin:
 
Are there any ripple effects for those investors see their stocks go to $0?

It will be a much larger scale when thousands of HDB flats become worth $0.
 
All good friend like ex mrt ceo ,jinx ,this hyflux ceo all leeches, they are the ones with pocket full of cash, investors lanlan with nothing due to greed
 
SINGAPORE - Beleaguered water treatment firm Hyflux has finally reached the end of the road after the High Court approved its winding up on Wednesday afternoon (July 21).

The move followed a three-year-long restructuring attempt that involved a number of surprising twists.

The ruling also means the long-suffering 34,000 retail investors holding Hyflux perpetual securities and preference shares (PnP) and who were owed $900 million will likely end up with nothing.

More at https://www.straitstimes.com/busine...x-high-court-oks-winding-up-of-water-treatmen
supsupwater for pap
only 1grc lost in ge
no problem
 
Meanwhile, life will still go on for Olivia in her nice house and car and a decent bank account.
 
sg.asiatatler.com


Hyflux's Olivia Lum Tells Us What It Takes to Be A Successful Entrepreneur​


Terence Lim

7-9 minutes



Hyflux's Olivia Lum Tells Us What It Takes to Be A Successful Entrepreneur


The CEO of global environmental solutions behemoth, Hyflux shares with us about what inspires her, her advice for budding entrepreneurs and what's next for the company.

What is the best and worst decision you’ve ever made?
Olivia Lum (OL) The best decision I have ever made was to set up Hydrochem (the precursor to Hyflux), believing firmly that the water business holds much promise and had the potential to grow into a big business. I am glad that I took the step to pursue my dreams. I don’t think I could live life without knowing where my dreams could lead me.
In your opinion, what made you a successful entrepreneur?
OL
My advice can be summarised in 7 "P"s: You must have the passion to pursue your dreams and the right people who share your vision to help you build a successful business. You must also persevere and be patient because there will be difficult times. Performance is critical to winning the trust of your customers as well as future orders. And do not be afraid to acknowledge that you need help because you cannot be good at everything. Seek partnerships to complement each other and to tap on your partners’ strengths. You must be able to identify the plus factor in your business to differentiate yourself from your competitors and have that competitive edge over them.”
(Related: 10 Women Who Are Shaping Singapore)

Tuaspring Integrated Water & Power Project

Tuaspring Integrated Water & Power Project
What has been the biggest challenge of your career?
OL
Any entrepreneur would tell you that the lack of funds is the biggest challenge for a start-up. Of the $20,000 that I had to start the company, $10,000 was spent on rental and rental deposits, telephone and fax lines, and basic office equipment. So half the funds were spent even before the business started operating. As funds were limited in the initial years, I multi-tasked as design manager, sales manager, lorry driver, welder, draftsman, and even plumber.

Who inspires you?
OL
I did not have any role model when I decided to take the entrepreneur route. I did, however, have the opportunity to learn invaluable lessons about life and business from different mentors at various stages of my life.
As a child, my grandmother was my biggest influence. From her, I received love, moral support and encouragement. Although she was not able to give me any material comfort, she developed in me, a sense of self-worth and the confidence to try new things and to succeed. For a child, that’s greater than any gift that money can buy.
When I was in primary school, my teacher impressed upon me that education was the key to success. After I finished my secondary school, my principal advised me to continue my education in Singapore. He told me that Singapore could provide me with the opportunities to expand my horizon, to push myself and realise my full potential. It was the best piece of advice given to me.
At university, my professors were my mentors not only for the courses that I took leading to my Honours degree in Chemistry, but also for the various discussions that we had on embarking on business, an area that I had always been interested in.
What was your dream job as a child?
OL
It has always been my dream to start my own business. When I graduated from the university, I worked as a chemist in Glaxo Smith Kline (GSK) and saw the various challenges large companies face in treating the wastewater from their processes. I realised that there was a market for treating water, especially as cities become more urbanised and industrialised. The water industry could only be a sunrise industry because needs and requirements for water would always increase.
(Related: 6 Creative Women Breaking Boundaries)

Elo drinking water

Elo drinking water
Tell us a bit more about Elo Water.
OL
In recent years, we have expanded our consumer portfolio with Elo drinking water and its related products and services. Since 2008, we have been researching on how water can be harnessed to improve health beyond just quenching thirst. In 2015, we invested into the production of Elo water in Singapore. It is a unique oxygen-rich water based on over 10 years of research in water science and technology that allows oxygen to remain in a stable and bound form.
With ageing and illnesses, our bodies may not be able to transport oxygen optimally to our organs and tissues, a condition known as hypoxia. More serious conditions caused by hypoxia such as diabetes, psoriasis and even cancer, may then develop.
Hyflux is excited to enter this wellness market as we believe Elo water has the potential to help people address hypoxia concerns. Tests on lab mice injected with human prostate cancer cells independently conducted by Australia’s Monash University have shown that the mice fed with Elo water were found to have significantly smaller cancer tumours than the control mice drinking tap water.

Hyflux's Olivia Lum signs a partnership with Badminton World Federation

Hyflux's Olivia Lum signs a partnership with Badminton World Federation
Currently, clinical trials with Changi General Hospital to establish the effectiveness of Elo water and Elo bath on diabetic and diabetic ulcer patients are in progress and expected to be completed this year. In addition, the Elo gel has been clinically tested and proven by Dermapro Skin Research Centre in Seoul, South Korea for its efficacy on skin wrinkles, colour, elasticity, hydration and radiance. So far, the market response for our Elo products and services has been very encouraging.
 
amazonswatchmagazine.com

1626913646801.png



The Life-changing Successes of Olivia Lum - Amazons Watch Magazine​


Amazons Watch Magazine Website

8-10 minutes




By: Tom Freyberg
Five years in the making, WWi was recently granted an exclusive interview with Olivia Lum, CEO of Singapore water firm Hyflux. Here she talks to Tom Freyberg about the Qurayyat deal in Oman, progress in India and what it takes to grow a multi-million dollar global water business.
A graduate from the National University of Singapore in 1986 with an honours degree in chemistry, Lum built her water firm Hyflux to generate revenues of over S$650 million in 2012.
Singapore entrepreneur Olivia Lum’s success story can be likened to her home nation. As an independent country back in 1965, Singapore lacked resources. Under the guidance of the country’s first Prime Minister — the recently deceased Lee Kuan Yew — the nation fostered multinationals and educated its workforce, mandating that English was taught in schools. Today it’s a thriving, self-sustaining economic hub in Asia.
The entrepreneurial spark and the well-documented rise of Hyflux’s CEO is a similarly impressive tale. Adopted at birth, Lum didn’t have it easy. “I went through a very poor childhood,” she tells me, referring to a time when she grew up in difficult conditions.
Yet it was this period that could be attributed to the entrepreneurial spark that marks the difference between the good and great CEOs. “Earning your own pocket money was something that you really had to do — otherwise you had no money,” she says. “So, as a child, how do you earn money? You sell papaya or fruit along the street. Maybe that was my training as an entrepreneur.
“It trains you how to approach customers. It trains you how to have a certain discipline that if you don’t sell, you probably won’t have money to get through the day.”
From selling papaya many years ago, her company generated group revenue of S$321.4 million for the year ending December 31, 2014. Profit was S$57.5 million. The journey from survival to becoming one of Asia’s top businesswomen running a multi-million dollar business, however, was not all smooth sailing.
After graduating from the National University of Singapore in 1986 with an honours degree in Chemistry, Lum was picked up by Glaxo Pharmaceuticals as a chemist, where she was tasked with looking after wastewater treatment.
Two and a half years later “having no contact and not knowing the outside world”, as she describes it, Lum moved forward with her dream to start her own business. Armed with only S$20,000 in 1989, she offered her services as an agent for large water companies.
She describes it as a “hard sell” knocking on people’s doors and although wanting to give up in the first and second year, she never did. Despite selling other companies’ products into Malaysia and Indonesia, Lum wanted to create and sell her own technology.
“During that time nobody had heard of membranes and I told myself that I needed to get into the membrane business because membranes are the most energy-efficient operation compared to many operations, like distillation and evaporation and so on,” she says. “I saw it as the most effective way to clean up water.”
After getting support from her lecturers at the National University of Singapore, she built a small membrane-based pilot project in 1992. It was this foresight with a then unproven technology that could be attributed to much of Hyflux’s success today.
“That’s how I started water recycling in Singapore. People did not want to build a large scale plant because it [membranes] was still not tested,” she says.
After nearly bankrupting the company by venturing into China, now offering built systems such as water filters and softeners, Lum survived the Asian financial crisis in 1997 while many of her competitors, involved in Thailand, Indonesian and Korean markets, took a big hit.
It was then in 1998 that the Singaporean government starting promoting water recycling. The companies “remembered us”, Lum says, from her earlier work doing pilot plants and demonstrations, which she says “got us in”. Lum then helped implement water recycling in Singapore for various industries.
In 2001, the CEO raised between S$6-$7 million from listing Hyflux as a public company despite, what could be called bad timing. “It was another financial crisis,” she says. “It was the dotcom bubble burst. So nobody wanted to subscribe to my shares. We had to sell it very cheaply to the market.”
Four years later and in 2005 Hyflux was put on the map. It built and opened Singapore’s first major desalination plant — the 136,380 m3/day SingSpring project. “At the time I can claim I built the largest desalination plant globally,” Lum says proudly.
“SingSpring was a real breakthrough for us,” she adds. “It was a huge risk but because we had been handling membrane systems for a long-time from 1992, we had nearly nine years’ experience. Membranes are very scalable technology. It’s like a fridge: you can build one fridge, you can build 10 fridges to 1000 fridges — you just put them together. This project was the breakthrough for us — we accepted the challenge and built the first one.”
For SingSpring, she insisted that a membrane plant of this scale would work, despite the doubters and critics. The result was the largest membrane-based desalination plant in Asia at the time.
This was the same for Hyflux’s winning bid for the Magtaa desalination plant in Algeria, North Africa. Lum insisted that a 500,000m3/day plant using membranes would work for the region. The result was the largest membrane-based desalination plant in Africa.
Despite delays, including a warehouse fire, Magtaa was inaugurated in November 2014. Water will be supplied to Oran, Algeria’s second-largest city and neighbouring provinces under a 25-year water purchase agreement with L’Algerienne Des Eaux and Sonatrach.
In March Hyflux signed a water purchase agreement for its 200,000 m3/day independent water project (IWP) in Qurayyat, Oman. Construction of the US$250 million plants is expected “soon” with the project scheduled to start operation in May 2017. Water will be supplied to the Oman Power and Water Procurement Company (OPWP) under a design, build, own and operate model (DBOO).
The CEO believes that future desalination projects will be delivered across MENA as both mega plants — at the scale of Magtaa — particularly in industrial areas where water is needed but also smaller desalination plants, ranging from 10,000 m3/day — 50,000 m3/day for coastline communities.
Concluding the interview, I decided to find out what has driven Lum to grow the business she has. What marks her different to other CEOs and why she, as a female in a male engineering dominated industry, has succeeded where others have failed.
“Perseverance,” she says astutely. “A lot of entrepreneurs may have a great idea, good products and good suggestions but they give up easily. They don’t persevere enough. As an entrepreneur — perseverance is a must-have attitude. Water is a sunrise business. Don’t easily give up. Water is becoming more and more scarce. Population and industrial growth mean there is more polluted water. These are critical elements that will propel water to the next level.”
Hyflux’s CEO finishes by saying: “There may be people who are not keen on the water industry or business but I think someone has to do something about it and that’s what we’re doing.”
It’s this humble attitude that has earned Lum the respect she deserves in the global water market. When retelling her story, she repeats the phrase “I told myself”, when referring to making a decision on her next move: whether it’s quitting Glaxo, launching her own water technology or bidding against the odds for SingSpring in Singapore or Magtaa in Algeria.
The CEO clearly has inner entrepreneurial voice guiding her, as well as a dogged determination that has driven her to scale up the business and keep growing.
Lum is an inspiration to every water professional out there wanting to grow a business and human being — no matter how tough your start in life — on sticking with your dream until it becomes a reality.
Source: waterworld.com
Post Views: 0
 
This clearly showed that Jiu Hu Bu(s) are really bad at managing a business entity. Another classic example is the destruction of SMRT Corp whilst under the management of Aunty Saw.
 
sg.asiatatler.com


Hyflux's Olivia Lum Tells Us What It Takes to Be A Successful Entrepreneur​


Terence Lim

7-9 minutes



Hyflux's Olivia Lum Tells Us What It Takes to Be A Successful Entrepreneur's Olivia Lum Tells Us What It Takes to Be A Successful Entrepreneur


The CEO of global environmental solutions behemoth, Hyflux shares with us about what inspires her, her advice for budding entrepreneurs and what's next for the company.

What is the best and worst decision you’ve ever made?
Olivia Lum (OL)
The best decision I have ever made was to set up Hydrochem (the precursor to Hyflux), believing firmly that the water business holds much promise and had the potential to grow into a big business. I am glad that I took the step to pursue my dreams. I don’t think I could live life without knowing where my dreams could lead me.
In your opinion, what made you a successful entrepreneur?
OL
My advice can be summarised in 7 "P"s: You must have the passion to pursue your dreams and the right people who share your vision to help you build a successful business. You must also persevere and be patient because there will be difficult times. Performance is critical to winning the trust of your customers as well as future orders. And do not be afraid to acknowledge that you need help because you cannot be good at everything. Seek partnerships to complement each other and to tap on your partners’ strengths. You must be able to identify the plus factor in your business to differentiate yourself from your competitors and have that competitive edge over them.”
(Related: 10 Women Who Are Shaping Singapore)

Tuaspring Integrated Water & Power Project

Tuaspring Integrated Water & Power Project
What has been the biggest challenge of your career?
OL
Any entrepreneur would tell you that the lack of funds is the biggest challenge for a start-up. Of the $20,000 that I had to start the company, $10,000 was spent on rental and rental deposits, telephone and fax lines, and basic office equipment. So half the funds were spent even before the business started operating. As funds were limited in the initial years, I multi-tasked as design manager, sales manager, lorry driver, welder, draftsman, and even plumber.

Who inspires you?
OL
I did not have any role model when I decided to take the entrepreneur route. I did, however, have the opportunity to learn invaluable lessons about life and business from different mentors at various stages of my life.
As a child, my grandmother was my biggest influence. From her, I received love, moral support and encouragement. Although she was not able to give me any material comfort, she developed in me, a sense of self-worth and the confidence to try new things and to succeed. For a child, that’s greater than any gift that money can buy.
When I was in primary school, my teacher impressed upon me that education was the key to success. After I finished my secondary school, my principal advised me to continue my education in Singapore. He told me that Singapore could provide me with the opportunities to expand my horizon, to push myself and realise my full potential. It was the best piece of advice given to me.
At university, my professors were my mentors not only for the courses that I took leading to my Honours degree in Chemistry, but also for the various discussions that we had on embarking on business, an area that I had always been interested in.
What was your dream job as a child?
OL
It has always been my dream to start my own business. When I graduated from the university, I worked as a chemist in Glaxo Smith Kline (GSK) and saw the various challenges large companies face in treating the wastewater from their processes. I realised that there was a market for treating water, especially as cities become more urbanised and industrialised. The water industry could only be a sunrise industry because needs and requirements for water would always increase.
(Related: 6 Creative Women Breaking Boundaries)

Elo drinking water

Elo drinking water
Tell us a bit more about Elo Water.
OL
In recent years, we have expanded our consumer portfolio with Elo drinking water and its related products and services. Since 2008, we have been researching on how water can be harnessed to improve health beyond just quenching thirst. In 2015, we invested into the production of Elo water in Singapore. It is a unique oxygen-rich water based on over 10 years of research in water science and technology that allows oxygen to remain in a stable and bound form.
With ageing and illnesses, our bodies may not be able to transport oxygen optimally to our organs and tissues, a condition known as hypoxia. More serious conditions caused by hypoxia such as diabetes, psoriasis and even cancer, may then develop.
Hyflux is excited to enter this wellness market as we believe Elo water has the potential to help people address hypoxia concerns. Tests on lab mice injected with human prostate cancer cells independently conducted by Australia’s Monash University have shown that the mice fed with Elo water were found to have significantly smaller cancer tumours than the control mice drinking tap water.

Hyflux's Olivia Lum signs a partnership with Badminton World Federation's Olivia Lum signs a partnership with Badminton World Federation

Hyflux's Olivia Lum signs a partnership with Badminton World Federation
Currently, clinical trials with Changi General Hospital to establish the effectiveness of Elo water and Elo bath on diabetic and diabetic ulcer patients are in progress and expected to be completed this year. In addition, the Elo gel has been clinically tested and proven by Dermapro Skin Research Centre in Seoul, South Korea for its efficacy on skin wrinkles, colour, elasticity, hydration and radiance. So far, the market response for our Elo products and services has been very encouraging.

ELO is hyfluxshop

She stole it too. She can't transfer it to shareholders without paying the perpetual bondholders. This is law but her board of directors and her and untouchables.
 
This clearly showed that Jiu Hu Bu(s) are really bad at managing a business entity. Another classic example is the destruction of SMRT Corp whilst under the management of Aunty Saw.
Why you think malays flush them out? And gave them for free to sinkie.
They created the term " brain drain" to fool PAP when in reality, its the reverse.
 
Didn’t Hyflux got played out by PAP ? Conned to invest in all sorts of nonsense and PAP pulled the carpet under their feet when they need help.
 
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