31-01-2018, 07:49 PM
Noble Group Denies ‘Enriching' Claim as Rescue Plan Ignites Spat
By Jasmine Ng and Andrea Tan
January 31, 2018, 5:41 PM GMT+8
Noble Group Ltd. responded to criticisms by one of its biggest shareholders about the embattled commodity trader’s conduct, and defended the debt rescue plan that’s set to hand management a bigger stake than equity investors.
Abu Dhabi-based Goldilocks Investment Co. wrote to the Singapore Exchange Ltd. this week requesting an investigation into Noble’s directors and management, according to a copy of the letter seen by Bloomberg. On Wednesday, Noble responded to those claims by saying its actions and public statements have been under “the regulatory microscope”, according to a statement to the Singapore bourse.
The complaint from Goldilocks highlights some of the challenges for Noble and creditors that have backed the rescue plan, which follows a three-year crisis marked by billions in losses, asset sales and controversial accounting. Noble’s in-principle deal proposes restructuring $3.5 billion in debt, potentially averting bankruptcy, by converting about half of the obligations into new equity.
That plan -- if approved -- will see all existing shareholders, including Goldilocks, cut to a 10 percent holding, while management of the new company gets as much as 20 percent. Goldilocks holds 8.1 percent of Noble Group’s stock, or 107.6 million shares. Singapore’s capital markets are regulated by the SGX, as well as the Monetary Authority of Singapore.
More details in https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/...nites-spat
By Jasmine Ng and Andrea Tan
January 31, 2018, 5:41 PM GMT+8
Noble Group Ltd. responded to criticisms by one of its biggest shareholders about the embattled commodity trader’s conduct, and defended the debt rescue plan that’s set to hand management a bigger stake than equity investors.
Abu Dhabi-based Goldilocks Investment Co. wrote to the Singapore Exchange Ltd. this week requesting an investigation into Noble’s directors and management, according to a copy of the letter seen by Bloomberg. On Wednesday, Noble responded to those claims by saying its actions and public statements have been under “the regulatory microscope”, according to a statement to the Singapore bourse.
The complaint from Goldilocks highlights some of the challenges for Noble and creditors that have backed the rescue plan, which follows a three-year crisis marked by billions in losses, asset sales and controversial accounting. Noble’s in-principle deal proposes restructuring $3.5 billion in debt, potentially averting bankruptcy, by converting about half of the obligations into new equity.
That plan -- if approved -- will see all existing shareholders, including Goldilocks, cut to a 10 percent holding, while management of the new company gets as much as 20 percent. Goldilocks holds 8.1 percent of Noble Group’s stock, or 107.6 million shares. Singapore’s capital markets are regulated by the SGX, as well as the Monetary Authority of Singapore.
More details in https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/...nites-spat
Specuvestor: Asset - Business - Structure.