Singapore oil trader to spend $ 3 billion on Asia expansion

Updated 10 June 2013
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Singapore oil trader to spend $ 3 billion on Asia expansion

SINGAPORE: Singapore oil trader and shipper Hin Leong plans to spend up to $ 3 billion to build oil terminals and distribution facilities in emerging Asian markets, including fresh investments in Myanmar and Indonesia, to meet rising oil demand from the region.
Projects proposed in the two Southeast Asian nations would account for around $ 300 million to $ 400 million on top of $ 2.7 billion to be spent on storage and terminal assets in China and East Timor, Hin Leong Chairman O.K. Lim said in an interview.
"East Timor, China, Indonesia and Myanmar - they all need oil for their development," Lim who founded Hin Leong Group, said. "We are already a fuel supplier and we want to provide more services."
The family company owns one of the largest commercial oil storage complexes in Asia, Singapore's Universal Terminal, with its trading operations rivaling majors like BP and Shell in its home waters.
It also has a fleet of more than 100 tankers, and it plans to raise trading revenue by 5-10 percent in the year ending Oct. 31 from about $12 billion in the last financial year.
As a long-time supplier to emerging Asian economies now opening up further to foreign investors, Hin Leong has watched oil demand in these markets grow from home use met by fuels in retail quantities, to industrial use met with bulk shipments in wholesale barrels and tankers.
In Myanmar, where Hin Leong is one of the top fuel suppliers, the company plans to set up a storage and distribution base near the former capital Yangon to sell directly to end users in one of Asia's least developed countries, Lim said.
"A lot of businesses are entering Myanmar after it opened its doors, so its oil demand is rising very fast," Lim said, adding that an investment there would start in the $ 100 million to $ 200 million range.
Myanmar's steps toward democracy after years of military rule have seen the United States and European Union ease or suspend sanctions, encouraging more investment from manufacturing to mining which will boost its oil demand.
Myanmar's oil and gas reserves are weighted toward gas, and it has to import most of its fuel for retail and industrial use.
Hin Leong is also planning to build oil storage and distribution units either in west Indonesia or in Papua province in the east to meet rising domestic demand.
In East Timor, phased investment would begin with 100,000 cubic meters of storage for four products — kerosene, gasoline, jet fuel and asphalt.
"We started supplying oil to Timor, such as kerosene for cooking to homes, in tin cans of 18-25 liters, which subsequently grew to 200-litre barrels," Lim said. "Now we plan to ship oil in tankers to power plants and for industrial use."
Lim said in January that the East Timor investment could grow to $ 1 billion and that Hin Leong could be the first foreign company to build a sizable infrastructure project in the impoverished nation, which has huge reserves of oil and gas.
Hin Leong is still awaiting Beijing's approval to build a $ 1.7 billion storage terminal at Meizhou Bay in southern province of Fujian that could eventually hold up to 41 million barrels of crude oil and products.
The firm is keen to enter the refining sector to secure fuel supply and is also looking at how it can enter the liquefied natural gas (LNG) market, Lim said.
It could invest in existing refineries and plans to start crude trading to buy feedstock for such a unit, he said. The company is also still in talks with the Singapore government to build a new $ 6 billion-$ 8 billion refinery.


Closing Bell: Saudi main index closes in red at 11,167  

Updated 5 sec ago
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Closing Bell: Saudi main index closes in red at 11,167  

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s Tadawul All Share Index dipped on Wednesday, losing 46.43 points, or 0.41 percent, to close at 11,167.54. 

The total trading turnover of the benchmark index was SR4.88 billion ($1.30 billion), as 66 of the listed stocks advanced, while 192 retreated. 

The MSCI Tadawul Index decreased, down 5.52 points, or 0.37 percent, to close at 1,506.55. 

The Kingdom’s parallel market Nomu lost 153.40 points, or 0.65 percent, to close at 23,486.52. This comes as 32 of the listed stocks advanced, while 31 retreated. 

The best-performing stock was Tourism Enterprise Co., with its share price surging 9.95 percent to SR14.36. 

Other top performers included Mobile Telecommunication Co., Saudi Arabia, which saw its share price rise by 5.32 percent to SR11.48, and Al Masar Al Shamil Education Co., which saw a 4.86 percent increase to SR22.89. 

On the downside, Almoosa Health Co. was the day’s weakest performer, with its share price falling 4.81 percent to SR150.40. 

Dallah Healthcare Co. fell 3.81 percent to SR113.50, while Saudi Research and Media Group dropped 3.44 percent to SR100.90. 

On the corporate front, Arabian Plastic Industrial Co. has signed a non-binding memorandum of understanding with K. K. Nag to explore the establishment of a specialized manufacturing facility for expanded polypropylene products. 

According to a Tadawul statement, the agreement sets out initial mutual obligations and rights between the two parties as part of APICO’s broader expansion strategy to increase production capacity and meet rising industrial demand. 

The company’s share price rose 1.21 percent to SR43.52 on the parallel market.