Hong Kong

Noble Group Ltd.’s foes aren’t going away. Less than 24 hours after the commodity trader won shareholder approval for its $3.5 billion debt-for-equity deal, long-standing critic Michael Dee said the revamped company will struggle to recover and shouldn’t be allowed to list shares in Singapore, Bloomberg News reported. “I really don’t believe that we’re going to be in any different situation,” Dee, a former senior managing director at Singapore state investment firm Temasek Holdings Pte, said in a Bloomberg Television interview on Tuesday.
Read more
Noble Group Ltd won approval from shareholders on Monday for a $3.5 billion debt restructuring plan that should ensure the survival of what was once Asia’s biggest commodity trader, Reuters reported. Faced with the prospect of the company’s insolvency, shareholders reluctantly backed a debt-for-equity swap that will leave them owning just 20 percent of the business, while handing majority control to a group of creditors comprised mainly of hedge funds.
Read more
The main contractor of M+, the West Kowloon Cultural District’s contemporary art museum, was fired by the government-appointed management authority on Friday owing to alleged insolvency, Hong Kong Free Press reported. In a press statement, the West Kowloon Cultural District Authority (WKCDA) said it has terminated its contract with Hsin Chong Construction Company Limited over the troubled project. Hsin Chong was awarded the HK$5.9 billion contract for multiple buildings in September 2015 after a selective tendering process.
Read more
Arnaud Vagner has been a mystery for more than three years. Noble Group, once one of the world’s biggest commodity trading houses, characterized him as a disgruntled former junior employee behind a series of reports by Iceberg Research, an anonymous group that began attacking its accounting practices in 2015, Bloomberg News reported. Even as the combined value of Noble’s equity and debt plunged by about $10 billion since then, Vagner declined to comment publicly or even confirm he was behind Iceberg. With the company now on the brink of a restructuring, he’s ready to talk.
Read more
Struggling commodity trader Noble Group, which is trying to push through a debt-for-equity restructuring in a bid to secure its survival, slumped to another quarterly loss in the second quarter of this year as the Asia-focused commodity house paid out bumper fees to its advisers, banks and creditors, the Financial Times reported.
Read more
Noble Group, the Singapore-listed commodity trader scrambling to complete a debt-for-equity swap, has increased the size of the bond that will be issued by its restructured trading holding company, according to a statement released on Monday morning.
Read more
Noble Group Ltd., the commodity trader seeking to push through a restructuring after losing billions of dollars and defaulting, has filed a claim in Australia against two coal producers for alleged breaches of contractual obligations under a marketing-services agreement, Bloomberg News reported. The Singapore-listed company, which will report another loss later this month, said a unit has filed the claim in the Supreme Court of New South Wales against Yancoal Australia Ltd. and its subsidiary Gloucester Coal Ltd.
Read more
Commodity trader Noble Group has reported another lossmaking quarter blaming interest and restructuring costs. Singapore-listed Noble, which is scrambling to complete a debt-for-equity swap, said it would report a loss of $115m to $140m for the three months to June after incurring $95m of restructuring expenses and $70m-$80m of finance and tax costs, the Financial Times reported. Noble has agreed to pay the legal costs and expenses of several lenders and shareholders, including Goldilocks Investment Co, which came in support of the debt restructuring last month.
Read more
Try as you might, it's difficult to find a more depressing stock market story than Noble Group, the Financial Times reported in a commentary. Once Asia’s biggest commodity trader, the Singapore-listed company has left a trail of devastation for investors who bought into Richard Elman’s dream of building a Far East rival to Glencore. From Singapore’s mom and pop investors on the light-touch SGX, to institutional buyers that probably should have known better, all have suffered serious wealth destruction as critics have savaged Noble’s accounting practices.
Read more
Hsin Chong Group Holdings Ltd. is set to become the second Asian company to default on its U.S. dollar bonds this year, the latest sign of rising borrowing costs impacting weaker firms’ ability to repay debt, Bloomberg News reported. The Hong Kong-listed builder anticipates it won’t pay the $300 million 2018 securities due today and has engaged with noteholders and their advisers to find a consensual solution, according to an exchange filing late Thursday. It has also engaged holders its bonds due 2019 as the nonpayment on 2018 notes will constitute an event of default.
Read more