China Aviation Oil ready for a comeback (Agencies) Updated: 2006-02-06 09:58
Shares of China Aviation Oil (Singapore), suspended since November 2004 after
the company's $550 million trading loss, will resume trading at the end of
March, said Gu Yanfei, head of a restructuring task force.
A meeting will
be held in the first week of March, when shareholders will vote on the issuance
of shares to the new investors BP and Temasek Holdings as well as to creditors,
Gu said Friday. They will also approve the new board, which will then appoint a
chief executive, she said.
"What we are looking at is the management and
the governance of the company going forward," Gu said after a meeting with
shareholders, the first since trading of the stock was halted.
China
Aviation Oil's derivatives-related loss was Singapore's biggest since the former
trader Nick Leeson lost $1.4 billion at Barings in 1995. Reports by
PricewaterhouseCoopers, the accounting firm that examined China Aviation Oil's
losses on behalf of Singapore's stock exchange, said the company overrode risk
controls and failed to follow correct accounting procedures.
"It's a
terrible loss, but something is better than nothing," David Gerald, chairman of
the Securities Investors Association of Singapore, said of the restructuring.
"It's a long haul and it will take time for the company to get back in the
black."
Gerald has been asked by the task force to meet with the
State-Owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission of China on what
can be done for shareholders. Gu said a date has yet to be fixed for that
meeting. China Aviation Oil is a unit of a Chinese government-owned
company.
As part of the restructuring before the issuance of new shares
to BP and other investors, China Aviation Oil's stock will be reduced to one
share for every five held. "My concern is whether minority shareholders will get
a fair share," said Mark Tan, who holds 10,000 shares bought about two months
before the stock was suspended. "But we'll just have to live with
it."
The company, which is China's dominant jet-fuel importer, avoided
bankruptcy when creditors in June agreed to write down some of its debt. BP,
Europe's biggest oil company, will get two board seats with its investment, Gu
said.
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