Friday 3 May 2013

Badminton: Li-Ning Singapore Open organisers promise more

SINGAPORE: Ticket prices for Singapore’s premier badminton event may have risen, but organisers promise it will be value for money.


This year, some 32,000 fans can expect a party atmosphere for the 26th Li-Ning Singapore Open when the annual US$200,000 (S$246,700) tournament returns to the Singapore Indoor Stadium from June 18 to 23.


Among the highlights are a new Singapore Badminton Association (SBA) Corporate League, featuring a mix of Singapore shuttlers like South-east Asian (SEA) Games gold medallist Fu Mingtian, doubles player Shinta Mulia Sari, former national star Ronald Susilo, national intermediate squad members, and the likes of Indonesia’s world No 19 men’s doubles pair Markis Kido and Alvent Yulianto Chandra representing six companies.


Fan experience and engagement will also be a focus this time, with a six-day badminton carnival to feature sponsors’ booths, and two game stations to allow spectators to test their badminton skills and win prizes.


There will also be cheerleading performances and mini-concerts before the finals on June 23, and the competition venue fitted with newly-designed corporate boxes.


However, tickets will be pegged at S$10 to S$18 for the qualifying and preliminary rounds, S$13 to S$38 (quarter-finals), S$8 to S$40 (semi-finals) and S$8 to S$44 (finals). Last year, it cost S$8 to S$14 for the qualifying and preliminary rounds, S$11 to S$30 (quarter-finals), S$5 to S$32 (semi-finals), and S$5 to $34 (finals).Premium and season tickets will cost between S$28 and S$200 this year, compared to S$19 and S$128 last year.


But organising committee chairman Francis Koh said: “The ticket increase is not much and is at about 10 to 20 per cent. In general, it is still very affordable. Over the years, we have seen many world-class players compete in this BWF (Badminton World Federation) World Super Series event. It is too early to say who is coming but we still expect the big names to come.”


To date, Indonesians Markis and Yulianto, men’s singles defending champion Boonsak Ponsana, rising Japanese shuttler Minatsu Mitani – who upset Indian world No 2 Sania Nehwal at the French Open – and compatriots Kenichi Tago and Sho Sasaki have been confirmed for the tournament. The final line-up will be decided after registration closes on May 14.


With the Singapore Open’s title sponsorship deal with sports brand Li-Ning expected to end this year, the SBA – who signed a S$8.8-million deal with Li-Ning in 2010 to sponsor the national team, Singapore Open and major local tournaments – is in discussions with potential sponsors for the Republic’s marquee badminton showpiece.


“It is possible that badminton will follow other sports in having multi sponsors for the Singapore Open and national team,” said SBA President Lee Yi Shyan.


“Every year, our operating budget is about S$4.5 million. Half is from the Singapore Sports Council, so the remaining half must come from sponsorship or event organisation.”


Although their bid to upgrade the Li-Ning Singapore Open from a US$200,000 Super Series to a top-tier Premier Super Series event boasting a minimum prize purse of US$500,000 failed last December, the SBA remain hopeful.


“If we are able to line up big sponsors, we hope to organise the premier super series,” said Lee. “The competing countries are coming in with much larger sponsorship money, so we just have to realise it is very competitive out there and other countries are more aggressive in bidding for the premier super series.”


Tickets to the Li-Ning Singapore Open will be available via SISTIC from May 8. Visit www.singaporebadminton.org.sg for more information.



Badminton: Li-Ning Singapore Open organisers promise more

Gamblers get lucky at Genting"s Singapore casino

A stroke of bad luck. That’s what casino operator Genting Singapore blamed for reporting a sharply lower-than-expected quarterly profit, while also flagging a cautious outlook due to muted Chinese economic growth.


Genting Singapore’s Resorts World Sentosa, one of two casinos in the island state that are the envy of the global industry since opening three years ago, said that its 35 per cent fall in core earnings simply came down to so-called “premium” gamblers getting lucky.


Those figures were in stark contrast to Wednesday’s quarterly earnings announced by Las Vegas Sands Corp, owned by billionaire Sheldon Adelson, which had been boosted by strong results in Singapore and Macau.


Genting Singapore’s January-March adjusted earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) fell to S$249.7 million (HK$1.6 billion) from S$381.4 million (HK$2.4 billion) a year ago.


Five analysts polled by Reuters had on average expected a profit of S$359 million (HK$2.3 billion) by the casino operator, which is more than half owned by Malaysia’s Genting.


Sands’ rolling chip volume, or betting volume by VIP players, at its Marina Bay Sands in Singapore rose 42.2 per cent to US$18.21 billion (HK$141.3 billion) in the quarter, the highest quarterly volume in the property’s history.


The two Singapore casinos are the world’s most profitable, but concerns have risen about debts from Chinese high-rollers and China’s economic uncertainty.


“Moving forward, looking at the economic situation around the world and also the noises that are coming out of China, we are cautious,” Tan Hee Teck, president and chief operating officer at Genting Singapore, told an analysts’ call on Thursday.


He expects Genting Singapore to write-off some of its debt this year. “We are not pulling back, but we are being a little bit more cautious,” Tan said, when asked if the casino would scale down the amount of credit given to its VIP customers.


Sands said it wrote off US$11 million (HK$85.4 million) in its Singapore property in the first quarter.


Despite Genting Singapore reporting record volume in its VIP business, Tan was cautious about the outlook for the rest of the year.


Genting Singapore said premium gamblers got lucky and won more of their bets in the first quarter.


“Compared to the first quarter of last year, the first quarter’s performance was largely affected by a much weaker win percentage in the premium players’ business despite a significant increase in the premium players’ rolling volume,” it said in a statement.


Genting Singapore, which is sitting on a cash pile of nearly S$4 billion, is keen to open a casino in Japan and is also interested in pursuing regional deals.


A pro-casino group of Japanese lawmakers has tapped an influential member of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) as its leader and plans to submit legislation this year aimed at opening the world’s third-largest economy to casino gambling.


“If you ask me, if I were a betting man, I would say the chances of it going through this year would probably be like 70-80 per cent,” Tan said.


Shares of Genting Singapore fell as much as 8.1 per cent early on Friday after the casino operator reported a 35 per cent drop in core earnings and flagged a cautious outlook due to muted economic growth in China.


The shares fell as low as S$1.48 after closing 4.9 per cent higher on Thursday before the results were released. Genting Singapore was among the top traded stocks by value and volume on Friday morning.



Gamblers get lucky at Genting"s Singapore casino

Johor Menteri Besar makes trip to Singapore - The Straits Times

d1ca1 ST 20130428 MALAYSIAVOTE1 SingTel Prefers Mobile in Seeking Myanmar Access


OUTGOING Johor Menteri Besar Abdul Ghani Othman took a break from his walkabouts and community events yesterday to board a bus with residents working in Singapore across the Second Link.


At Jurong East MRT station, he had breakfast at Wendy’s restaurant and spoke to journalists before crossing back to Malaysia to resume his campaign.


At least 100,000 Malaysians living in the Johor Baru area travel to Singapore to work every day, with a significant number of them due to vote in constituencies where close fights are expected.


With the general election just three days away, Mr Ghani said he wanted to get a sense of their daily experience commuting.


“It takes quite an effort to travel to work for them – more than an hour one way, even longer going home because of the congestion,” added Mr Ghani, who spent about an hour in Singapore.


His trip drew a response from his opponent in Gelang Patah, opposition veteran Lim Kit Siang.


“If I go there, I’ll be accused of being a stooge of the Singapore Government,” Mr Lim told The Malaysian Insider.


Malaysian election laws do not prohibit candidates from going overseas to canvass for votes.


Election Commission deputy chairman Wan Ahmad Wan Omar said: “Candidates are allowed to meet voters anywhere they live.”


Singapore’s laws are different.


“No one is allowed to publicise a cause or campaign, or demonstrate support for or opposition to any persons or government without a police permit,” said a Singapore police spokesman.


Mr Ghani, who did not carry any campaign material, told reporters the ride was smooth. But, he added, travel would be much more convenient when a Rapid Transit System linking Johor Baru to Woodlands is ready by 2018.


Proposals for the crossing, including its design, should be presented to the governments of Malaysia and Singapore before the end of the year, he added.


“When completed, people will move to and from Singapore more efficiently,” he said.


Singapore’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, responding to media queries, said it was surprised to hear about Mr Ghani’s visit.


“We were surprised to learn from the media that Johor Menteri Besar Abdul Ghani Othman was in Singapore to look at connectivity initiatives between Singapore and Johor,” it said in a statement. “We are sure that all Malaysians and Singaporeans will welcome better connectivity.”


Mr Ghani also noted that while there were ample job opportunities in Johor itself, the stronger Singapore dollar saw many Malaysians opting to work there.


But, he added, Johor would also offer more challenging employment options as the Iskandar Malaysia development region takes off. It will create more than 500,000 jobs across various sectors in the next five to eight years.


“It is inevitable people look at real incomes, and in that sense, Iskandar loses a lot of skilled workers. But a rise in wage levels will certainly happen,” he said.


“There are groups of voters I have yet to reach, and I will try to connect with them.”


zakirh@sph.com.sg



Johor Menteri Besar makes trip to Singapore - The Straits Times

Singapore Eco-Hotel Covered


The PARKROYAL on Pickering is a hotel which teems with plant life and features tropical plants and palm trees throughout its various sky-gardens – even connecting with a surrounding park allowing it to merge seamlessly with it’s surroundings.


Architectural firm WOHA are the minds behind the green hotel who first developed the concept a few years back. The solar-powered sky-gardens – which are the first in Singapore – sit on overhanging platforms at four-floor intervals. Apart from the plants themselves, the hotel uses automatic light, rain and motion sensors in combination with rain harvesting and recycled water to be a powerhouse of environmentally friendly initiatives.


61f1c PARKROYAL on Pickering Singapore SingTel Prefers Mobile in Seeking Myanmar Access


Various places around the hotel feature the use of nature-inspired materials such as light and dark wood, pebbles and water. The 367 rooms use calm colours and natural light to produce a relaxed and tranquil atmosphere for guests during their stay, not to mention excellent views of the city and sky-gardens.


If the hotel design alone wasn’t enough, the fifth floor also sports wellness, fitness and recreational space with an infinity pool overlooking the city, jacuzzi, outdoor terrace and 300-metre walk – it even has a series of colourful birdcage-shaped cabanas to relax in.


61f1c PARKROYAL on Pickering Singapore 2 SingTel Prefers Mobile in Seeking Myanmar Access


So it’s safe to say the designers behind this magnificent hotel were successful in bringing their vision to life, combining rural and urban features in a seamless way, allowing for an outdoor experience in the heart of the city.


PARKROYAL on Pickering



Singapore Eco-Hotel Covered

Thursday 2 May 2013

Lucky high rollers raise stakes but pull down Singapore casino profits







SINGAPORE – High rollers wagered more money at both of Singapore’s casinos in the first quarter of this year – but also got luckier, pulling down the operating profits of the two casinos.



ce658 st logo Singapore wants to lead the region in accountancy
Get the full story from The Straits Times.



Spending by high rollers at Marina Bay Sands in the first quarter rose 42.2 per cent from a year ago. But less was earned from them, leading to a 16 per cent year-on-year fall in the casino’s first-quarter operating profits to US$396.8 million (S$490 million), The Straits Times reported.


Resorts World Sentosa had a similar experience with high rollers, which led to its first-quarter operating profits falling 34 per cent from a year ago to S$255.4 million.



ce658 myp newlogo Singapore wants to lead the region in accountancy
Get My Paper for more stories.





Lucky high rollers raise stakes but pull down Singapore casino profits

Qatar Bank No. 1 Supplanting Singapore as Canada Slips

You need to enable Javascript to play media on Bloomberg.com


The tiny Persian Gulf nation of Qatar controls vast gas and oil deposits that feed billions of dollars annually into the state Treasury. Its petroleum riches make it the wealthiest nation per capita in the world, according to the International Monetary Fund.


While other countries have been struggling to stay out of recession, Qatar averaged 13 percent annual growth during the five years through 2012, Bloomberg Markets will report in its June issue.


More from the June 2013 issue of Bloomberg Markets



The Qatar Investment Authority, a sovereign wealth fund, has big stakes in Agricultural Bank of China Ltd., Barclays Plc (BARC), Credit Suisse Group AG (CSGN) and Tiffany Co (TIF). It owns London department store Harrods outright.


As Qatar’s government has spread its financial wings, the country’s biggest financial institution, Qatar National Bank SAQ (QNBK), has been at its side. Under Ali Shareef Al Emadi, its chief executive officer since 2005, QNB has become the largest lender in the Middle East and one of the most profitable. Even as the bank has expanded, Al Emadi has maintained QNB’S capital base and aversion to risk.


As a result, based on its performance in fiscal year 2012, Qatar National Bank is No. 1 in Bloomberg Markets’ third annual ranking of the world’s strongest banks.


The convulsions that have rippled across the region, including the Arab Spring revolts and a near default in the nearby emirate of Dubai, have only brought new money to Al Emadi’s door.


‘Good Liquidity’


“We always see good liquidity coming to us when things get bad in the market,” Al Emadi says in a rare interview at the company’s headquarters overlooking a crescent-shaped bay in the capital of Doha. “That’s a very strong signal from customers and investors that they view the bank as a safe haven.”


The strongest-bank ranking includes lenders with at least $100 billion in assets — something QNB achieved for the first time in 2012 with a series of acquisitions in the Mideast and North Africa that gave it a foothold in 25 countries. The ranking weighs and combines five criteria, including Tier 1 capital compared with risk-weighted assets; nonperforming assets against total assets; and efficiency, a measure of costs against revenues.


Tier 1 capital consists of a bank’s cash reserves, common equity and some classes of preferred stock, all of which combine to act as a shock absorber against losses when the economy hits a rough patch.


QNB joins a ranking whose top tier is dominated for a third year by Asian and Canadian lenders. Singapore’s Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp. (OCBC), No. 1 the past two years, dropped to No. 2 in 2012.


Canada Falls


Some of Canada’s banks also fell, as the industry was hit by ratings downgrades and hurt by a slowing economy and an increasingly risky housing sector. An exception was Bank of Nova Scotia (BNS), or Scotiabank, which moved up to No. 7 from No. 18.


In regional rankings, three of the top five European banks are Swedish, while all four of the strongest banks in South America are in Brazil.


In a surprising development, Citigroup Inc. (C) ranks as the strongest U.S. bank. At No. 9, it comes in ahead of JPMorgan Chase Co. (JPM), which is No. 15. David Knutson, a senior analyst at Legal General Investment Management America, says the Federal Reserve gets the credit, for refusing to allow Citi to dissipate its capital through share buybacks and dividends.


Maybank No. 13


Another new entrant is Kuala Lumpur-based Malayan Banking Bhd (MAY). Maybank, as it’s known, now has 2,200 branch offices in 20 countries. CEO Abdul Wahid Omar attributes its No. 13 rank to tough supervision by Bank Negara Malaysia, the central bank, and new stress testing and risk-control measures inside the bank.


Government supervision of Qatar’s QNB comes with the territory. The bank’s chairman, Yousef Kamal, is the country’s finance minister. It’s 50 percent owned by the QIA, the $100 billion fund that absorbs much of the country’s oil and gas revenues.


Bigger than all other publicly listed domestic lenders combined, QNB provided 66 percent of loans to the government and government-owned entities last year, while state agencies accounted for more than half of deposits, according to data provided by the bank.


“The bank is essentially an extension of the state,” says Akber Khan, director of asset management at Al Rayan Investment in Doha. “Any concerns about future capital adequacy or balance sheet strength are entirely redundant.”


Government ties don’t explain all of QNB’s strength, says Al Emadi, who graduated from the University of Arizona with a degree in finance.


‘We Lose Deals’


“We are very close to the government and government agencies, but we get deals on a very much commercial basis,” he says. “We lose deals; we get deals.”


While the bank benefited from the government’s purchase of its real estate investments after the 2008 financial crisis, it didn’t receive a government capital increase as other local lenders had. QNB’S profits have risen by an average of 27 percent a year during the past five years.


QNB has become a global financial force, driven to do business outside the country in part by the small size of its home market. Qatar’s population is 1.9 million, and just 20 percent of its residents are native Qataris. As economic turmoil gripped the world, other banks shrank into their home territories, Al Emadi says.


“We’ve done completely the other way around,” he says.


Buying in Libya


During 2012, the bank purchased stakes in Iraqi and Libyan lenders. In March 2013, it bought the Egyptian branch of France’s Societe Generale SA (GLE) for $2.45 billion. In April 2012, it sought to acquire Turkey’s Denizbank AS; it lost out to Moscow-based OAO Sberbank.


In 2011, QNB acquired a controlling stake in Indonesia’s PT Bank Kesawan. Indonesia is the home market for PT Indosat, which is controlled by QNB customer Qatar Telecom QSC. The Qatar phone company recently changed its name to Ooredoo.


“QNB’s profits have doubled in the last three years,” Khan says. “For very rapid growth to continue, growth outside Qatar will be necessary.”


Malaysia’s Maybank (MAY) owes its size and strength to the aftermath of the 1997 to 1998 Asian financial crisis, which forced the devaluation of the region’s currencies and the near collapse of a dozen Indonesian, Malaysian, South Korean and Thai banks.


In Kuala Lumpur, Bank Negara Malaysia orchestrated mergers that combined the country’s 60-plus financial institutions into 10 big commercial banking groups, now reduced to eight. Maybank emerged from that shake-up as Malaysia’s biggest lender. It has since expanded further to become the fourth-biggest bank by assets in Southeast Asia.


A Pragmatic Approach


“The central bank has always adopted a very pragmatic supervision approach,” Maybank CEO Abdul Wahid says. “Whenever there are signs of problems, Bank Negara has never been hesitant to intervene.”


Maybank’s rapid overseas expansion began with the acquisition of a controlling stake in PT Bank Internasional Indonesia (BNII) in 2008. The bank aims to extend its footprint to all 10 members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations as the region moves toward a planned economic integration by 2015, Abdul Wahid says.


Maybank earned 30 percent of its pretax profit from overseas operations last year, the bulk of it from Indonesia and Singapore.


Alfred Chan, director of financial institutions at Fitch Ratings in Singapore, says Maybank had no choice but to look for growth outside its home territory.


‘Highly Saturated’


“Malaysia and Singapore are highly saturated banking sectors,” he says. “That means profitability tends to be on the lower end.”


Maybank’s answer has been to expand to fast-growing nations such as Indonesia. But in Indonesia, “risk is also relatively higher compared to Malaysia,” Chan says.


As the Kuala Lumpur-based lender, which includes an Islamic-banking unit, has expanded, it’s also strengthened its risk management team.


“We needed to make sure that we have the right people with the right skills to manage our risks,” the CEO says. “That has been done.”


There’s now a risk-control team embedded in every key division of the bank, a spokesman says.


Malaysia started putting into place the so-called Basel III rules, designed to reinforce the capital of big international banks, on Jan. 1 — ahead of a majority of the 27 members of the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision. In October, Maybank raised 3.66 billion ringgit ($1.18 billion) from a private placement of its shares to help bolster its capital.


Basel III


And the bank says it has instituted several other Basel III reforms ahead of the international group’s timetable, which stretches the process to 2019.


“We always believe in being ahead of the curve,” Abdul Wahid says. “We are very much prepared to meet all the new requirements under Basel III.”


As Asian banks have gained strength, Canadian banks have lost a little of their luster. While five of the six biggest Canadian banks are among the 20 strongest, only two — Scotiabank (BNS) and Royal Bank of Canada — improved their positions. Toronto-Dominion Bank (TD) fell to No. 8 from No. 4. Still, Toronto- Dominion CEO Ed Clark says nothing has changed.


“Every year, our stress tests tell us we’re stronger than the previous year,” he says. That’s in part because the bank continues to avoid areas like structured finance, he says.


No Foolish Bets


“You don’t have to go out on the risk curve to look after the shareholder, and it’s a foolish bet to do that,” Clark says.


Canada’s banks have been bracing for a lending slowdown as the country’s household debt-to-income ratio reached a record 167 percent at the end of 2012. Standard Poor’s lowered credit ratings on six Canadian lenders by one grade in December, and Moody’s Investors Service followed suit in January with downgrades on six lenders.


SP forecast that revenue and loan growth would slow to mid-single-digit levels in 2013 from 9 percent and 10 percent in 2012.


“We base this expectation on a slowing domestic retail lending business — the banks’ largest growth engine and revenue contributor,” the ratings company said in a March 21 report.


Citigroup (C), which was rescued from insolvency in 2008 with a $45 billion U.S. government bailout, makes the Bloomberg Markets ranking after being excluded in 2011 for failing the Fed’s stress test. Assets in Citi Holdings, the New York institution’s so-called bad bank, tumbled 49 percent in the two years through March to $149 billion.


Declining Risk


“The businesses that they’ve exited are higher-risk businesses,” Legal General’s Knutson says. “You remove them from the balance sheet and the level of risk declines.”


Even as Citigroup ratcheted down its risk and increased its capital, the board of directors decided new management was needed and replaced CEO Vikram Pandit with Michael Corbat, a prior head of the bad bank.


Unlike Citigroup, Qatar National Bank has no quarrel with the government over its size or the quality of its assets.


“Five years ago, the government’s goal was to make QNB the largest bank in the region,” Al Rayan Investment’s Khan says. “Growth has been astonishing, and the objective was achieved very rapidly.”


And as the bank continues to fund Qatar’s ambitious projects, he says, “the government will make sure it has the capital it needs.”


How We Crunched the Numbers


To identify the world’s strongest banks, we used the Equity Screening function on the Bloomberg Professional Service to obtain a list of the 78 banks with total assets of $100 billion or more as of mid-March.


The ratio of a bank’s Tier 1 capital to its risk-weighted assets accounted for 40 percent of each bank’s overall score. The ratio of nonperforming assets to total assets got a weighting of 20 percent, as did the ratio of reserves for loan losses to nonperforming assets. The ratio of deposits to funding accounted for 15 percent of the score. And the efficiency ratio, which compares costs with revenues, received a 5 percent weighting.


Banks were ranked on each criterion, and the ranking positions were weighed and combined to determine the banks’ overall scores. Lenders that reported a loss in net income for 2012 or that failed the Federal Reserve’s most recent stress test were excluded.


All data are for the banks’ 2012 fiscal year, which in most cases ended on Dec. 31. Banks that hadn’t reported data for fiscal year 2012 by March 31 weren’t included.


Get your free issue of Bloomberg Markets! SUBSCRIBE TODAY


To contact the reporters on this story: Robert Tuttle in Doha at rtuttle@bloomberg.net. Chong Pooi Koon in Kuala Lumpur at pchong17@bloomberg.net


To contact the editor responsible for this story: Michael Serrill in New York at mserrill@bloomberg.net.



Enlarge image
b5a69 i3TB0FmlPpec Singapore police investigate 2 Chinese bus drivers allegations of police ...


The World’s Strongest Banks


3f8da iTeGtUAPMAzw Singapore police investigate 2 Chinese bus drivers allegations of police ...


Sam Kaplan/Bloomberg Markets


Qatar’s National Bank is No. 1 in Bloomberg’s annual ranking. The tiny Persian Gulf nation boasts the planet’s highest income per capita.


Qatar’s National Bank is No. 1 in Bloomberg’s annual ranking. The tiny Persian Gulf nation boasts the planet’s highest income per capita. Photographer: Sam Kaplan/Bloomberg Markets



3f8da iRXRl76KMXCo Singapore police investigate 2 Chinese bus drivers allegations of police ...



April 12 (Bloomberg) — Angus Blair, founder of the Signet Institute, Amanda Staveley, founder and chief executive officer of PCP Capital Partners LLP, and Alex Kronemer, co-founder and executive director of Unity Productions Foundation, speak about lessons from the Arab Spring, sovereign wealth funds, Syrian unrest and investment in Egypt.

They spoke April 8 at the Bloomberg Link Doha Conference in a panel discussion moderated by Stephanie Baker. (Source: Bloomberg)



Qatar Bank No. 1 Supplanting Singapore as Canada Slips

Johor-Singapore rapid transit system in final stages: Abdul Ghani


Outgoing Johor Chief Minister Abdul Ghani Othman says plans for the rapid transit system (RTS) linking Johor and Singapore are in their final stages.





Abdul Ghani Othman (right)




Johor Bahru (AFP Photo/Roslan Rahman)













SINGAPORE: Outgoing Johor Chief Minister Abdul Ghani Othman says plans for the rapid transit system (RTS) linking Johor and Singapore are in their final stages.


Speaking to reporters in Singapore, Mr Abdul Ghani said both the Singapore and Malaysia governments will finalise the costing and design of the system by the end of this year.


He added that it is also important to think about a single customs immigration and quarantine (CIQ) complex to further accelerate the movements of people between the two countries.


Mr Abdul Ghani travelled by bus from Gelang Patah in Johor to Jurong East bus interchange in Singapore.


It was his first time travelling on the Causeway Link bus and he noted that the journey took more than an hour.


Mr Abdul Ghani believes the rapid transit system will help commuters cut their travelling time between Johor and Singapore substantially.


It will also reduce traffic congestion.


The RTS is scheduled for completion by 2018.





Johor-Singapore rapid transit system in final stages: Abdul Ghani