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Monday, 3 September 2012
Monday, 27 August 2012
F&N-Ice cream soda-355mL-BIGGER 355 ML CAN - -Singapore
Can Museum ID: F&N01-ICS-355-SG-199?
Brand: F&N
Flavor: Ice cream soda
Volume: 355mL
Country Made For: Singapore
Country Made In: Singapore
Description: BIGGER 355 ML CAN - ENJOY MORE OF THE BEST
Year of Issue: 199?
Material:
Code:
Barcode: 013134002055
Top:
Theme:
Series:
Brand: F&N
Flavor: Ice cream soda
Volume: 355mL
Country Made For: Singapore
Country Made In: Singapore
Description: BIGGER 355 ML CAN - ENJOY MORE OF THE BEST
Year of Issue: 199?
Material:
Code:
Barcode: 013134002055
Top:
Theme:
Series:
F&N Expands Recycling Campaign to 161 Schools on Penang Island
Pulau Pinang – F&N Beverages Marketing Sdn Bhd has teamed up with
Majlis Perbandaran Pulau Pinang (MPPP) for its first “Kempen Kitar
Semula F&N Beverages & MPPP 2012” which will see 161 schools
from two districts on Penang Island competing for a share of the
RM14,800 prize in this three-month long campaign.
As part of F&N Beverages’ efforts to do its bit for the environment while educating schoolchildren on the importance of recycling towards reducing the amount of waste Malaysians generate, this campaign gives F&N the avenue to expand its efforts in this area following the successful “Kempen Kitar Semula F&N Beverages & MBSA” held in Shah Alam, Selangor, which is currently in its sixth year.
111 schools, which fall under the jurisdiction of the Pejabat Pelajaran Daerah Timur Laut, and 50 more under the Pejabat Pelajaran Daerah Barat Daya have been invited to take part, making this the largest schools recycling campaign F&N Beverages has undertaken to date. F&N Beverages has undertaken to date with over 50 schools registering their participation to date. That number is expected to rise in the weeks ahead.
The campaign is divided into two categories - primary and secondary schools - and requires schools to collect items like aluminium cans, plastic bottles and papers for recycling. The school with the highest collection per head/student stands to win the first prize of RM1,300. First runner up takes home RM1,100 while the second runner up walks away with RM900. Prizes are also handed out to fourth to tenth places from RM800, RM700, RM600, RM500, RM400, RM300, and RM200 respectively. The prizes are identical in both the primary and secondary schools category.
But that’s not all. Two special awards are handed out to recognize the highest amount of aluminium and the highest amount of plastic collected. The winner for each award will scoop up RM600.
Speaking at the launch of the campaign, Cariessa Goh, Corporate Affairs Manager at F&N Beverages Marketing Sdn Bhd said that F&N Beverages is proud to be given the opportunity to work collectively with MPPP whose greening efforts throughout the state was highly regarded.
“MPPP’s active participation and constant engagement have resulted in the numerous ideas and ways to further enhance this campaign. These are essential towards the success and sustainability of the campaign while crystallising our vision in order to replicate this success in years to come,” Goh said.
“F&N Beverages is confident that our experience in organising a similar campaign for the past six years, coupled with MPPP’s immense knowledge on environmental preservation and recycling, will make this campaign a huge success. We look forward to more similar campaigns to educate and nurture the next generation, especially here in Penang, to equip them with the knowledge and mindset towards a better earth and a better future.”
“Kempen Kitar Semula F&N Beverages & MPPP 2012” also focuses on teaching the schoolchildren the concept of Reduce, Reuse and Recycle but with a twist. As proposed by MPPP, besides the conventional 3Rs, the campaign introduces a fourth “R” – Rethink.
“Simply put, we need to rethink the way we use up earth’s resources, rethink our actions and consider their impact on the environment as well as the communities around us. We need to change the way we think to minimise the negative and bring about the positive, to be innovative in our efforts especially with recycling in mind,” Goh explained.
Besides MPPP, F&N Beverages will also work closely with Jabatan Pelajaran Negeri Pulau Pinang to ensure the campaign is carried out successfully.
“Kempen Kitar Semula F&N Beverages & MPPP 2012” runs from June 1, 2012 till August 31, 2012. The winning schools will be crowned at a prize giving ceremony scheduled for September 2012.
As part of F&N Beverages’ efforts to do its bit for the environment while educating schoolchildren on the importance of recycling towards reducing the amount of waste Malaysians generate, this campaign gives F&N the avenue to expand its efforts in this area following the successful “Kempen Kitar Semula F&N Beverages & MBSA” held in Shah Alam, Selangor, which is currently in its sixth year.
111 schools, which fall under the jurisdiction of the Pejabat Pelajaran Daerah Timur Laut, and 50 more under the Pejabat Pelajaran Daerah Barat Daya have been invited to take part, making this the largest schools recycling campaign F&N Beverages has undertaken to date. F&N Beverages has undertaken to date with over 50 schools registering their participation to date. That number is expected to rise in the weeks ahead.
The campaign is divided into two categories - primary and secondary schools - and requires schools to collect items like aluminium cans, plastic bottles and papers for recycling. The school with the highest collection per head/student stands to win the first prize of RM1,300. First runner up takes home RM1,100 while the second runner up walks away with RM900. Prizes are also handed out to fourth to tenth places from RM800, RM700, RM600, RM500, RM400, RM300, and RM200 respectively. The prizes are identical in both the primary and secondary schools category.
But that’s not all. Two special awards are handed out to recognize the highest amount of aluminium and the highest amount of plastic collected. The winner for each award will scoop up RM600.
Speaking at the launch of the campaign, Cariessa Goh, Corporate Affairs Manager at F&N Beverages Marketing Sdn Bhd said that F&N Beverages is proud to be given the opportunity to work collectively with MPPP whose greening efforts throughout the state was highly regarded.
“MPPP’s active participation and constant engagement have resulted in the numerous ideas and ways to further enhance this campaign. These are essential towards the success and sustainability of the campaign while crystallising our vision in order to replicate this success in years to come,” Goh said.
“F&N Beverages is confident that our experience in organising a similar campaign for the past six years, coupled with MPPP’s immense knowledge on environmental preservation and recycling, will make this campaign a huge success. We look forward to more similar campaigns to educate and nurture the next generation, especially here in Penang, to equip them with the knowledge and mindset towards a better earth and a better future.”
“Kempen Kitar Semula F&N Beverages & MPPP 2012” also focuses on teaching the schoolchildren the concept of Reduce, Reuse and Recycle but with a twist. As proposed by MPPP, besides the conventional 3Rs, the campaign introduces a fourth “R” – Rethink.
“Simply put, we need to rethink the way we use up earth’s resources, rethink our actions and consider their impact on the environment as well as the communities around us. We need to change the way we think to minimise the negative and bring about the positive, to be innovative in our efforts especially with recycling in mind,” Goh explained.
Besides MPPP, F&N Beverages will also work closely with Jabatan Pelajaran Negeri Pulau Pinang to ensure the campaign is carried out successfully.
“Kempen Kitar Semula F&N Beverages & MPPP 2012” runs from June 1, 2012 till August 31, 2012. The winning schools will be crowned at a prize giving ceremony scheduled for September 2012.
F&N Beverages Marketing has launched an app for iOS and Android devices to engage users with the beverage company’s brands.
The F&N Bubble Blaster, free for download from the Apple App Store and Google Play, has to be activated by pointing the device at any F&N QR code or its TV and cinema commercials.
Once the game begins, pop as many coloured bubbles on screen as possible within the given time frame to collect points.
If you are feeling competitive, log in to Facebook via the app and issue a challenge to your friends to beat your high score.
Users of the app can also participate in F&N’s contest and stand to win prizes if they get the highest points on the leaderboard for the week.
Once the game begins, pop as many coloured bubbles on screen as possible within the given time frame to collect points.
If you are feeling competitive, log in to Facebook via the app and issue a challenge to your friends to beat your high score.
Users of the app can also participate in F&N’s contest and stand to win prizes if they get the highest points on the leaderboard for the week.
F&N BUKA & MENANG
- Participants must submit completed entry forms with
the correct answer to the question and attached with
the participating and eligible F&N canned milk
products lid(s).
- Only participating F&N can lids printed with the
winning code(s) will be accepted.
- The participating F&N canned milk products are: F&N
Sweetened Creamer 505g, F&N Sweetened Creamer
cluster pack (6s) 505g, F&N Vitaminised Milk 505g,
F&N Teh Tarik Sweetened Creamer 505g and F&N
Sweetened Condensed Filled Milk 515g.
- Entry forms are printed on the back of the
participating F&N canned milk product labels.
- Entry forms downloaded and printed from
www.fndairies.com are also permitted.
Prizes:
- Special Prize x 10,000 winners (RM5 cash voucher
each)
- Grand Prize x 4,000 winners (RM50 cash voucher
each)
Send your entries to:
F&N SCM Buka & Menang Contest 2012, P.O. Box 3032, 47509 Subang Jaya, Selangor
the correct answer to the question and attached with
the participating and eligible F&N canned milk
products lid(s).
- Only participating F&N can lids printed with the
winning code(s) will be accepted.
- The participating F&N canned milk products are: F&N
Sweetened Creamer 505g, F&N Sweetened Creamer
cluster pack (6s) 505g, F&N Vitaminised Milk 505g,
F&N Teh Tarik Sweetened Creamer 505g and F&N
Sweetened Condensed Filled Milk 515g.
- Entry forms are printed on the back of the
participating F&N canned milk product labels.
- Entry forms downloaded and printed from
www.fndairies.com are also permitted.
Prizes:
- Special Prize x 10,000 winners (RM5 cash voucher
each)
- Grand Prize x 4,000 winners (RM50 cash voucher
each)
Send your entries to:
F&N SCM Buka & Menang Contest 2012, P.O. Box 3032, 47509 Subang Jaya, Selangor
Year-to-date, F&N Malaysia shares have registered a gain of
RM2.81, or 15.54%. This counter will likely push higher this week as bid
rumours continue to swirl around the company.
Fundamental-wise, though, nothing much has actually changed for F&N Malaysia, whose business interests include soft drinks, dairy products and property.
Earnings outlook for the company over the medium term remains lacklustre, according to most analysts. This is especially so since F&N Malaysia lost the Coca-Cola franchise in September last year.
To recap, F&N Malaysia and Coca-Cola were previously partners in a binding long-term agreement, under which F&N Malaysia would bottle and distribute Coca-Cola's products in Malaysia. Coca-Cola would return the favour by bottling and distributing F&N products in Singapore.
But ever since the break-up, F&N Malaysia has had to deal with a significant dent in its sales volume, as Coca-Cola used to contribute to at least one third of the company's total volume.
While F&N Malaysia's own brands such as 100 Plus and Seasons have been doing well, their sales growth have not been sufficient yet to make up for the company's loss of the Coca-Cola franchise.
In addition, F&N Malaysia is also challenged by the rising commodity prices such as that for sugar, whey and skimmed milk, and these have been eating into its profit margins. Income from its property division, on the other hand, is still not meaningful enough due to the company's limited exposure to the sector.
So, based on fundamentals alone, one can perhaps argue that F&N Malaysia's share price is overvalued at its present level that is trading at about 27 times its historical earnings, compared with the industry average of around 17 times earnings.
As it stands, most analysts have a “sell” call on the counter; the highest target price for F&N Malaysia based on the analysis of five research houses polled by Bloomberg is only RM18.10, and the lowest target price for the counter is only RM13.30.
Analysts whom StarBiz speaks to say unless and until a bidding war breaks out for the group's beverage business, they are unlikely going to upgrade their rating on F&N Malaysia.
As CIMB Research puts it in its report, in the absence of an official announcement on the potential merger and acquisition (M&A), it would maintain its “underperform” call on F&N Malaysia. It says an M&A premium will only be ascribed to F&N Malaysia's shares if a bidding war for the group's beverage business is confirmed.
Well, it's still early days.
It was only last Thursday that Bloomberg had reported about Coca-Cola exploring a bid for F&N Singapore's beverage business. Citing several unnamed sources with knowledge of the matter, the international news wire agency said the deal could value F&N Singapore's beverage business, which included its dairy and soft-drinks operations that are held under F&N Foods Pte Ltd and F&N Malaysia, at US$3bil (RM9.39bil).
A week earlier, Bloomberg reported about Kirin also mulling a bid for the same business, basing it on information revealed by three unnamed sources, who, it said, had “knowledge” of the matter. Kirin is presently the second-largest shareholder in F&N Singapore, with a 14.96% direct stake in the latter.
Both Coca-Cola and Kirin were said to have been waiting on the sidelines for F&N Singapore's beer-business sale to go down smoothly for Dutch brewer Heineken NV first before launching their bids for the non-alcoholic segment.
And the beer deal did go through, after F&N Singapore announced late Friday that it would accept Heineken's offer of S$5.1bil (RM12.78bil) to buy out its entire 39.7% stake in Asia Pacific Breweries Ltd, the producer of more than 40 beer brands, including Tiger, in this region.
Now, CIMB Research has painted three scenarios that will likely happen in the event of a bidding war for F&N group's beverage business. The first is for the bidder to aim for control of F&N Singapore, as that will then ultimately give the bidder control of F&N Malaysia.
The other two, which are “cheaper” alternatives, will be for the bidder to go for F&N Singapore's 56.32% entire stake in F&N Malaysia, or for the bidder to just launch a direct general offer for F&N Malaysia.
Whichever route is chosen, the winner will definitely get crowned as the biggest soft-drinks player in Malaysia. This is because, according to Euromonitor, F&N group still commands the biggest soft-drinks market share in the country, leading Coca-Cola at second place and Permanis Sdn Bhd (a wholly-owned subsidiary of Japan's Asahi Group Holdings Ltd and distributor of Pepsi brand, among others) at third.
It's a highly competitive environment; it won't be surprising that giant companies will invest in various strategies to solidify their market position and quench their ever-growing thirst for a bigger slice of the beverage market in any parts of Asia, including Malaysia.
Fundamental-wise, though, nothing much has actually changed for F&N Malaysia, whose business interests include soft drinks, dairy products and property.
Earnings outlook for the company over the medium term remains lacklustre, according to most analysts. This is especially so since F&N Malaysia lost the Coca-Cola franchise in September last year.
To recap, F&N Malaysia and Coca-Cola were previously partners in a binding long-term agreement, under which F&N Malaysia would bottle and distribute Coca-Cola's products in Malaysia. Coca-Cola would return the favour by bottling and distributing F&N products in Singapore.
But ever since the break-up, F&N Malaysia has had to deal with a significant dent in its sales volume, as Coca-Cola used to contribute to at least one third of the company's total volume.
While F&N Malaysia's own brands such as 100 Plus and Seasons have been doing well, their sales growth have not been sufficient yet to make up for the company's loss of the Coca-Cola franchise.
In addition, F&N Malaysia is also challenged by the rising commodity prices such as that for sugar, whey and skimmed milk, and these have been eating into its profit margins. Income from its property division, on the other hand, is still not meaningful enough due to the company's limited exposure to the sector.
So, based on fundamentals alone, one can perhaps argue that F&N Malaysia's share price is overvalued at its present level that is trading at about 27 times its historical earnings, compared with the industry average of around 17 times earnings.
As it stands, most analysts have a “sell” call on the counter; the highest target price for F&N Malaysia based on the analysis of five research houses polled by Bloomberg is only RM18.10, and the lowest target price for the counter is only RM13.30.
Analysts whom StarBiz speaks to say unless and until a bidding war breaks out for the group's beverage business, they are unlikely going to upgrade their rating on F&N Malaysia.
As CIMB Research puts it in its report, in the absence of an official announcement on the potential merger and acquisition (M&A), it would maintain its “underperform” call on F&N Malaysia. It says an M&A premium will only be ascribed to F&N Malaysia's shares if a bidding war for the group's beverage business is confirmed.
Well, it's still early days.
It was only last Thursday that Bloomberg had reported about Coca-Cola exploring a bid for F&N Singapore's beverage business. Citing several unnamed sources with knowledge of the matter, the international news wire agency said the deal could value F&N Singapore's beverage business, which included its dairy and soft-drinks operations that are held under F&N Foods Pte Ltd and F&N Malaysia, at US$3bil (RM9.39bil).
A week earlier, Bloomberg reported about Kirin also mulling a bid for the same business, basing it on information revealed by three unnamed sources, who, it said, had “knowledge” of the matter. Kirin is presently the second-largest shareholder in F&N Singapore, with a 14.96% direct stake in the latter.
Both Coca-Cola and Kirin were said to have been waiting on the sidelines for F&N Singapore's beer-business sale to go down smoothly for Dutch brewer Heineken NV first before launching their bids for the non-alcoholic segment.
And the beer deal did go through, after F&N Singapore announced late Friday that it would accept Heineken's offer of S$5.1bil (RM12.78bil) to buy out its entire 39.7% stake in Asia Pacific Breweries Ltd, the producer of more than 40 beer brands, including Tiger, in this region.
Now, CIMB Research has painted three scenarios that will likely happen in the event of a bidding war for F&N group's beverage business. The first is for the bidder to aim for control of F&N Singapore, as that will then ultimately give the bidder control of F&N Malaysia.
The other two, which are “cheaper” alternatives, will be for the bidder to go for F&N Singapore's 56.32% entire stake in F&N Malaysia, or for the bidder to just launch a direct general offer for F&N Malaysia.
Whichever route is chosen, the winner will definitely get crowned as the biggest soft-drinks player in Malaysia. This is because, according to Euromonitor, F&N group still commands the biggest soft-drinks market share in the country, leading Coca-Cola at second place and Permanis Sdn Bhd (a wholly-owned subsidiary of Japan's Asahi Group Holdings Ltd and distributor of Pepsi brand, among others) at third.
It's a highly competitive environment; it won't be surprising that giant companies will invest in various strategies to solidify their market position and quench their ever-growing thirst for a bigger slice of the beverage market in any parts of Asia, including Malaysia.
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