Noble Group Ltd.pushed on with efforts to bolster investor confidence in the region’s top commodity trader by securing shareholders’ approval to sell the company’s stake in its agricultural unit and saying that its banks are still behind it.
Stockholders at a special general meeting in Singapore voted to back the sale of the 49 percent holding in Noble Agri Ltd. to Cofco Corp. for at least $750 million, with 90 percent of 4.03 billion shares represented at the gathering endorsing the deal. Chief Executive Officer Yusuf Alirezatold shareholders the sale would help the company to improve liquidity, and said separately that Noble’s banks continue to support the company.
Noble Group has extended losses in 2016 after Standard & Poor’s joined Moody’s Investors Service in cutting the company’s credit rating to junk, and as investors shunned commodity companies amid a rout in raw materials. The Hong Kong-based trader said earlier this month that it’s confident the Noble Agri deal would be approved, and will help its rating metrics to exceed those required for investment-grade credit.
‘Best Thing’
“Banks are concerned about the sector, investors are concerned about the sector,” Alireza told shareholders ahead of the vote, referring to commodities. “The best thing to do is to show to our shareholders we have liquidity.”
After the result, Alireza told shareholders that the company has some $2.6 billion of debt that is maturing and these debts can be rolled over, without specifying a time frame. Noble Group’s banks continue to support the company, he said in response to a question.
The company repurchased $31.6 million of senior notes due in 2020, or 2.6 percent of the total principal amount, with $1.18 billion outstanding, Noble Group said in a statement early on Thursday, hours before the SGM got under way. The trader also repurchased $1 million of notes due 2018.
Noble Group’s shares traded unchanged at 27.5 Singapore cents at 12:46 p.m. and are 31 percent lower this year, the worst performer on the benchmark Straits Times Index. The stock sank 65 percent last year as raw materials fell, and the company’s accounting and finances were challenged by Muddy Waters LLC and a group called Iceberg Research. Noble Group rejected the claims.
More Nimble
Chairman and founder Richard Elman said he planned to make Noble Group into a smaller, more nimble company, according to comments to Reuters earlier this month in which he forecast that the commodity cycle was bottoming. Plans to bring new investors into the company were taking time, Elman said.
Proceeds from the sale of the Noble Agri stake will be used to repay debt, the company said in a statement on Dec. 23. The transaction will result in a non-cash loss of $546 million, or the difference between the sale price and carrying value of the asset as of Sept. 30, the company said.