
Displaying items by tag: Tianrui
Shandong Shanshui Cement starts to tidy up debts
16 December 2016China: Shandong Shanshui Cement has entered into a debt investment framework agreement. Cinda Shandong will acquire the defaulted bonds issued by Shandong Shanshui. It will also loan Shandong Shanshui up to US$1.15bn. Deputy chairman Mi Jingtian told the Xinhua News Agency that his company had 'paid in full' all outstanding interest and regained a 'normal working relationship' with commercial banks. Earlier in December 2016 Shandong Shanshui said that it had settled with China Merchants Bank in a dispute over US$81m of loans. Shanshui Cement has faced financial problems since a shareholder battle for control of the company took place in late 2015.
Li Liufa resigns from Shanshui Cement
02 June 2016China: Li Liufa has resigned from Shanshui Cement with effect from 31 May 2016. He held the positions of an executive director, the chairman of the board, and the chairman of both the nomination committee and the executive committee of the company.
Li stated that his resignation would reduce potential conflicts of interest in any future fundraising campaigns by the company. The company and its major shareholder Tianrui Group is exploring various fundraising options, including equity fundraising, to resolve the financial difficulties of the group and to restore the public float of the company.
Shanshui Cement warns of ‘significant’ loss in 2015
16 March 2016China: Shanshui Cement has issued a profit warning, predicting a significant loss in 2015 compared to 2014. It has blamed the impending financial result on poor market demand for cement, industry production overcapacity and management distractions with legal proceedings the company has undertaken concerning the company and its subsidiaries.
In late January 2016 Shanshui Cement defaulted on a US$270m bond. The default followed a battle for control of the company between Tianrui Cement, its biggest shareholder, and the Zhang family, its second-largest shareholder and former owners.
Shanshui Cement defaults on US$270m bond
25 January 2016China: Shandong Shanshui defaulted on a US$270m three-year bond that matured on 21 January 2016. It is the second default for its owners, China Shanshui Cement, since November 2015. The move places Shanshui Cement at increased risk of bankruptcy and complicates plans by Tianrui Group to purchase the company. The previous debt default triggered multiple lawsuits from creditors that have already seen some of its assets frozen or put into impending auctioning, according to the South China Morning Post.
"The underlying cause of Shandong Shanshui's debt problems is unresolved disputes over shareholders' control, which restricted its fund-raising channels," said Shandong Shanshui in a statement. Since the estimated value of the company's assets far exceeds its debt, it expects court-ordered assets sales to bring in less proceeds than claims made by creditors, it added.
Tianrui provides loan for Shanshui bond interest repayment
05 January 2016China: Shanshui Cement's largest shareholder, Tianrui Group, has provided a US$9.3m loan to the company for interest repayment of the onshore bond of its Shandong subsidiary, Shandong Shanshui Cement Group, which defaulted in November 2015.
The loan facility is unsecured, interest free and has no fixed repayment terms, and has been remitted to the bank account designated for the bond's repayment, according to Shanshui. It didn't mention when the company could also repay the principal of the bonds, which amounted to US$307m, or whether Tianrui will provide further funding. Shanshui defaulted on the bond payment and triggered a cross default of the company's other debt after a shareholder struggle. Shanshui's board, which is now controlled by Tianrui, still faces a mounting management dispute over its Shandong subsidiary with Shanshui's founder and second-largest shareholder, the Zhang family.
Shanshui’s subsidiary said that Tianrui takeover was illegal
07 December 2015China: Shanshui Cement's major operating unit, Shandong Shanshui Cement Group, has said in a statement that the Shanshui Cement Board's removal of Management and Directors from Shandong Shanshui by Tianrui Group was illegal as it required government approval. Tianrui, the largest shareholder of Shanshui Cement, took control of the board at an extraordinary general meeting (EGM) on 1 December 2015, resulting in the removal of Shandong Shanshui management.
Shanshui Cement management ousted as Tianrui Cement seeks control
04 December 2015China: The management of China Shanshui Cement Group Ltd's operating unit was ousted two days after executives of its parent were dismissed, in a move analysts said underscores efforts by the company's biggest shareholder, Tianrui Group, to solidify control.
Shandong Shanshui Cement Group Ltd Founder Zhang Caikui, Chairman Zhang Bin and Chief Financial Officer Henry Li were among key managers whose positions were terminated on 3 December 2015. Tianrui's Vice Chairman Li Heping has succeeded Zhang Bin to become Chairman of the unit.
A Game of Cement Companies
18 November 2015People matter in cement companies. Just ask Bruno Lafont, the originally proposed CEO of LafargeHolcim before the merger plans between Lafarge and Holcim changed in mid-2015. Another example is Zhang Bin, the chairman of Shanshui Cement. Some of the shareholders at Shanshui Cement are working hard to remove him. The next attempt has been scheduled for 1 December 2015.
Shanshui Cement, one of the biggest Chinese cement producers, called for the liquidators this week possibly in response. It decided to apply for provisional liquidation after determining that it would default on onshore debt payments due on 12 November 2015. Earlier in the month it had announced doubt whether it could pay its debts.
The scale of this liquidation is monumental for the cement industry. It is broadly similar to a producer at least the size of Dangote going bust. Shanshui Cement is one of China's top ten cement producers. It defaulted on a US$314m onshore debt payment on 12 November 2015.
Based on Global Cement Directory 2015 data, Shanshui Cement is the seventh largest cement producer in the country with 15 cement plants and a cement production capacity of 30.5Mt/yr. Shanshui Cement itself reports that it has a production capacity of 102.6Mt/yr making it the country's fourth largest cement producer. In its 2014 annual results Shanshui Cement reported sales revenue of over US$2.4bn. Its net profit was over US$48m. Sales and profits were down year-on-year in 2014 compared to 2013 and its interim report for 2015 reported the same downward trend. Sales revenue fell by a third to US$793m year-on-year for the first half of 2015. In 2014 its total debt was reported to be US$2.5bn with a gearing ratio of 56.9%, a relatively high figure leaving it vulnerable to decreasing profits.
As the Wall Street Journal and others have reported, the situation has as much to do with corporate politics as it does with over-borrowing. Hot on the heels of Shanshui's liquidation announcement came an offer of help to pay the debts from local rival Tianrui Group if its attempts to change the board of Shanshui were finally successful. Tianrui became the largest shareholder of Shanshui in April 2015 when it increased its stake to 28%. In the process it beat China National Building Material Company and Asia Cement Corporation, who hold 16.7% and 20.9% stakes in Shanshui respectively.
The heart of the Shanshui debacle is the 'key man' clause as reported by Reuters. Borrowing to the company is dependent on current chairman Zhang Bin retaining his position. As soon as he leaves it triggers the repayment of offshore bonds worth US$500m. Normally not due for payment until 2020, the bonds contain a clause that forces the company to sell them within 30 days should Zhang Bin depart.
Shanshui seems likely to be able to pay its debts judging from its sales revenue, assets and the strength of its main shareholders. However, it has chosen to default for the moment. The question for analysts watching this from outside China is whether it masks deeper problems in the Chinese economy as growth continues to slow and industrial overcapacity lingers. Shanshui is the sixth mainland Chinese company known to have defaulted on a bond this year, according to Bloomberg. It's also likely to be operating at a cement production utilisation rate of around 50%.
If the Shanshui Cement situation is more to do with markets than personalities, then it may represent an alarming acceleration of the slowdown of the Chinese economy for the cement industry. If personalities matter more, then the situation is a battle comparable to the politics on the television show 'Game of Thrones.'
Tianrui Group will help fix Shanshui debt if EGM vote passes
13 November 2015China: The largest shareholder in Shanshui Cement, Tianrui Group, has said that it could help solve the debt woes of Shanshui Cement, if it is successful in a bid to change the company's board at an extraordinary general meeting on 25 November 2015, according to Bloomberg.
Shanshui, which is at the centre of a shareholder scrap for control, failed to pay US$314m of onshore notes due on 12 November 2015. It is at least the sixth Chinese company to default in the local bond market in 2015 as borrowers struggle amid an economic slowdown. Shanshui, which is incorporated in the Cayman Islands, has decided to file a winding up petition and seek the appointment of provisional liquidators there. Two banks have asked for early repayment of Shanshui's loans and the default scare has spread to the asset-backed securities market.
Li Heping, Vice Chairman of Tianrui, said that Shanshui's filing for a winding-up petition has raised potential costs for his company because it now faces finding a debt solution. Tianrui, which holds 28% of Shanshui, would get 'nothing in return' from its stake if it didn't help, he said. China National Building Material Company and Asia Cement Corporation are also shareholders in Shanshui with 16.7% and 20.9%, respectively.
Shanshui's Chief Financial Officer Henry Li said that noteholders could try and get their money back by asking the court to liquidate Shanshui's assets, which would be the worst outcome. In addition to the US$314m that Shanshui failed to repay, the company has another US$800m onshore notes outstanding, according to Bloomberg-compiled data.
China Tianru revenue rises by 14% to US$1.4bn in 2013
02 April 2014China: China Tianrui Group Cement Company has reported that its revenue rose by 14% to US$1.40bn in 2013 from US$1.22bn in 2012. Its gross profit remaining static at US$305m in 2013 and its earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation rose slightly to US$356m. The Chinese cement producer attributed the rise in revenue to increasing sales volumes of cement in response to a 'proactive' pricing strategy and a general increase in demand driven by rural development and the demand from certain large-scale infrastructure projects, such as the South-North Water Transfer Project.
Sales of cement rose by 19% year-on-year to US$1.30bn in 2013. Sales of clinker fell by 23% to US$107m. By region, the company saw its revenue in its Central China region rise by 13% to US$1.01bn. In Northeastern China its revenue rose by 16% to US$385m. By volume, the company sold 36.9Mt/yr in 2013, a rise of 41.4% from 2012.
In 2013 Tianrui acquired one 1.2Mt/yr clinker production line and six cement production lines with a combined production capacity of 5.3Mt/yr in Liaoning and Henan provinces, at a cost of US$109m.