The Sun (Malaysia)

Noble sells US oil-liquids business to Vitol Group

> Singapore-listed firm warns of Q3 loss of up to US$1.25 billion

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SINGAPORE: Embattled commoditie­s trader Noble Group announced yesterday the sale of its American oilliquids business to Vitol Group and warned of a third-quarter loss of up to US$1.25 billion (RM5.29 billion).

Singapore-listed Noble said in a statement the sale to Vitol, the world’s largest independen­t oil trader, should generate proceeds of US$582 million, and is the latest move to pay off debts as the firm fights to survive.

The once-mighty company has been hammered since 2015 as plunging commodity prices hit its bottom line while it has also suffered a ratings downgrade and allegation­s of irregular accounting practices.

Noble said in a statement that it expects a total net loss in the quarter ending Sept 30 of between US$1.1 billion and US$1.25 billion, after reporting a heavy loss of US$1.75 billion in the second quarter.

“The operating environmen­t continues to be challengin­g for the group and this impacted performanc­e in (the third quarter of) 2017,” Noble said.

Noble’s shares resumed trading after being halted on Friday pending the announceme­nt of the sale and slipped more than 10% to 34 Singapore cents.

The firm’s stock has been hammered since the start of the crisis and has sunk about 78% this year.

The disposal of Noble’s oil liquids unit, which trades large amounts of crude and refined oil products, came after the sale in July of its US gas and power unit to rival Mercuria Energy America.

“The core of their business has changed to some degree, but they’re still fighting to survive,” said Nicholas Teo, a trading strategist at KGI Securities (Singapore).

“Management has been selling assets to lighten the debt load, and this oil deal is quite significan­t in size.”

Noble wants to refocus its business on “hard” commoditie­s – those that are mined such as coal and metals as well as on freight and liquefied natural gas, with an eye on Asia. It is also reducing its staff to about 400, having had 900 employees at the end of June. – AFP

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