Gulf News

Bidders line up for UAE’s Stanford Marine Group

Banks now control SMG, which operates supply vessels for oil and gas industry

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Gulf Navigation Holding, Tristar Group, Hineni Capital and BT Investment are among bidders for Dubai-based marine services firm Stanford Marine Group (SMG), sources said.

Banks now control SMG, which operates offshore supply vessels for the oil and gas industry, after it struggled to meet terms of its debt obligation­s following a steep fall in chartering rates.

Neither SMG nor the bidders named by the sources responded to requests for comment.

SMG is 51 per cent owned by a fund managed by Dubaibased private equity firm Abraaj, which is in provisiona­l liquidatio­n after a row with investors over the use of their money in a $1 billion health care fund. Abraaj denies any wrongdoing. Abu Dhabibased Waha Capital owns the remaining 49 per cent stake.

Abraaj’s joint provisiona­l liquidator­s declined to comment.

Waha did not respond to a request for comment.

Creditors of SMG are compiling a shortlist of the bids in consultati­on with PwC, which is acting as adviser, two of the sources said.

The creditors include Noor Bank, Barwa Bank, Ajman Bank, United Arab Bank, Qatar Islamic Bank and First Gulf Bank, which is part of First Abu Dhabi Bank. Any sale of SMG could leave banks with a significan­t haircut because the firm’s debt outstrips its equity, two of the three sources said.

Nature of bids

One of the sources said the bids were either acquisitio­n offers involving buying out the creditors and leaving SMG debt free, or offers to restructur­e the debt by taking shares in the company, injecting capital and providing funds to modernise SMG’s fleet. Abraaj had been considerin­g listing SMG or selling it since 2013. But the firm was hit by the collapse in oil prices in 2015, which led to a steep fall in chartering rates and a decline in projects.

One of the sources said interest in SMG had revived partly because of the possibilit­y of an uptick in charter rates if oil prices remained more buoyant.

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