Glencore sells parts of oil storage to China's HNA, awaits US clearance
HONG KONG (Reuters) — Swiss-based trading and mining giant Glencore Plc has partly completed the sale of a 51% stake in its storage and logistics businesses to a unit of China’s HNA Group, although transfer of some assets is pending US clearance.
Glencore in March agreed to sell the stake in HG Storage International Ltd, a vehicle that carries its petroleum products storage and logistics portfolio, to HNA Innovation Finance Group Co for $775 MM.
The commodities trader said on Friday that $579 MM of the deal had closed. It added that three assets located in the United States would be transferred to HNA in 2018 upon receiving clearance from the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS), which reviews national security implications of foreign investments in US firms or operations.
In a two-year acquisition spree, privately owned HNA has signed $50 B worth of deals, buying stakes in logistics firms, hotels such as Hilton and even Deutsche Bank. This has prompted US and European authorities to closely examine the Chinese firm’s ownership.
CIFUS has not yet given its approval to a number of other major deals by HNA.
HNA said, in a separate statement, that the companies had completed the deal and would operate HG Storage International Ltd’s portfolio in Europe, Africa and the Americas as a joint venture. It did not mention any pending US approval for the transfer of three US assets.
A spokeswoman for HNA did not have an immediate comment on CFIUS approval. Glencore declined to comment further. CFIUS declined to comment.
HNA has come under pressure to provide greater clarity about who owns the conglomerate.
The CIFUS process has held up the completion of HNA’s majority stake purchase in Skybridge Capital, owned by former White House communications director Anthony Scaramucci.
This month, US software firm Ness Technologies S.A.R.L. said it was suing HNA for failing to adequately answer CIFUS’ questions about its ownership, accusations that HNA has dismissed as baseless.
Glencore had been looking to sell a bundle of its global oil storage stakes, following similar moves by rivals as a boom period for storage showed signs of ending.
Demand for storage exploded following the oil price plunge in 2014 because the abundance of crude for immediate delivery meant traders could make millions by buying oil cheaply and storing it to resell later at higher prices.
But the appeal of storing oil for Western trading houses decreased when the market balance changed as a result of OPEC-led oil output cuts.
HNA has moved increasingly into commodities and logistics in the past year. In September, it announced shareholder approval to buy Singapore’s CWT for $1 B. CWT’s businesses include logistics services, commodity marketing, financial services and engineering services.
Reporting by Kane Wu, additional reporting by Jennifer Hughes in Hong Kong, Clara Denina and Julia Payne in London; editing by Himani Sarkar and Jason Neely
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