August 03, 2009

Earlier Opening, Quicker Returns!

CIMB has estimated that Genting Highlands's new resort hotel-cum-casino project worth S$6.6 billion (about RM16 billion)in Sentosa Island,Singapore will open its door to the public possibly by year end 2009.As such,earning potential must go up as compared to earlier estimates.

The “quick pace” of construction could lead to a pre-2010 opening instead of early next year, CIMB said in a report today after a recent visit to the site in Singapore.

Genting may announce the resort’s opening date next month, it said.

The casino resort in Singapore is expected to generate S$690 million in earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization in the first year of operations, more than twice what CIMB’s previously estimated.

CIMB today raised its target price on Genting to RM9.40 from RM7.90. Shares of the company, based in Kuala Lumpur, gained 1.9 per cent to RM6.42 at noon today.

Genting’s Singapore project is one of two casino resorts the government has allowed to be built in the city-state as part of its goal to lure 17 million visitors and triple annual tourism revenue to S$30 billion by 2015. Genting Singapore Plc, partly owned by Malaysia’s Genting, said on June 25 the resort in Singapore is on track to open in early 2010.

Las Vegas Sands Corp, controlled by billionaire Sheldon Adelson, said on July 8 it will open its Singapore casino resort on schedule in January or February next year.

So let us see how good is CIMB in its estimates and how the market will react to it. They spoke of Axiata and Axiata's share price went heavenwards!

It May be Home but I Shall Not Return

There are many among us that think Singapore is Paradise Regained after its split from Malaysia way back in 1965.The issues faced by the younger generation points to a different direction. Read this article.I have taken liberty to do some paraphrasing.

"I think Singapore has a lot of catching up as far as IT, R & D and new technologies are concerned, even though Singapore is ahead of Malaysia.

How can Singapore achieve or come close to the standards of US, Japan or Europe?

Jonah, 22, has been studying in US for less than a year, but he has already decided that he will not return to Singapore to work after graduation.

A first-year student taking computer science at Stanford University, he says that US is far ahead of Singapore in science and technology. Situated near the Silicon Valley, Stanford's outstanding students are offered jobs by top IT firms even before they graduate.

"They have the world's top firms like Google, Microsoft and Apple - companies that value creativity. Working for them will broaden my horizons and improve my resume," he told my paper.

"While there are also many multi-national companies in Singapore, my impression is that they focus on product assembly, marketing and sales."

According to a survey by Experiences 2009, the organiser of an annual US education convention, there are quite a lot of overseas students who think like Jonah.

According to the survey of 153 Singaporean undergraduates at 15 top US universities, as many as 79 per cent prefer to work in US after they graduate. Only 18.1 per cent wants to return to Singapore immediately after they complete their studies.

At Chung Cheng High School's 70th anniversary celebration last month, Senior Minister Goh Chok Tong expressed his concerns about this phenomenon. He said that more than one-fifth of the students who performed well between 1996 to 1999 (those who scored at least four 'A's and a B3 in the General Paper) are no longer working in Singapore a decade later.

More than one third of those who studied overseas and did not receive scholarships are also not working in Singapore.

In Goh's speech he pointed out Singapore's conundrum - while preparing students to be 'entrepreneurial and world-ready', we are also 'growing wings' on them and more students will be heading overseas to develop their careers in future.

Why do they leave?

Why has Singapore no hold for these students? Do they leave because the pull factors from other countries are much stronger?

Students interviewed by a paper say that they leave not only because of the lack of job opportunities, but also because Singapore is too stressful and they don't feel appreciated.

Ng Hui Jin, 20, a Biology student at Imperial College in UK said that the pace of life is so fast in Singapore, she could barely catch her breath at times. She feels that Europeans place more emphasis on quality of life. The pace is slower there and her classmates do not compare on their results.

"Perhaps the learning environment and lifestyle here is what keeps Singaporean students in Europe," said Hui Jin.

Ridy Lie, 28, who graduated from Carnegie Mellon in 2003 has worked at Amazon.com for six years. He said that he likes the free and easy culture in American IT companies. A software developer, he can wear t-shirts and jeans to work, and their supervisors do not require that they report to work by a certain time.

"The company also provides a two-storey recreation area which includes a basketball court, arcade and gym. Our bosses even encourage us to spend our time there during work hours, to get inspiration."

Higher pay also played a part in his decision to stay in the US.

"Big IT firms in US will pay a fresh grad between US$60,000 to US$80,000 (S$87,000 to S$115,000) while investment banks and consultancies can pay up to US$90,000 (S$130,000), this is practically three to five times more than what they can get in Singapore."

At least one student says that she wants to leave because she doesn't feel appreciated.

After the financial crisis last year, many firms around the world retrenched a large number of employees and quite a number of graduates made their way back home but were unable to find a job in Singapore.

London School of Economics graduate Ruchika Tulskyan, 22, applied to 20 companies for a job but received no response.

"The government has been encouraging overseas students to return to Singapore, but Singaporean corporations do not seem to hold the same attitude. It has made me doubt my decision to come back."

Disappointed, Ruchika has decided to further her studies at Columbia University next month."

So while we complain about the brain drain in Malaysia, it is also happening on the other side of the Causeway. The reasons may be different but the trend is the same-pulled by work life-styles and fat salary packages.

For those intending to do IT, remember there is the exciting up-stream R&D jobs and the financially rewarding R&D business opportunities. Investment banks and venture capitalists will pay you top dollar to identify a successful R&D output and to bring it quickly into market as a commercial product.