China Petroleum and Chemical Corp. (Sinopec), the country's
leading onshore oil producer, has announced to issue zero-coupon
convertible bonds worth 11.7 billion Hong Kong dollars.
It was the largest convertible bond offering by a Chinese
company, Sinopec said in a statement released on Tuesday.
Net proceeds from the offering will be used to buy pack two Hong
Kong-listed companies, Sinopec Beijing Yanhua Petrochemical Co.
Ltd. and Sinopec Zhenhai Refining and Chemical Co. Ltd.
The offering came after Sinopec took back the investors' rights
on another four Shanghai-listed subsidiaries namely Sinopec Qilu
Petrochemical Co., Sinopec Yangzi Petrochemical Co., Sinopec
Zhongyuan Petroleum Co., and Sinopec Shengli Oilfield Dynamic Group
Co. last February at a cash offer of 14.3 billion yuan (US$1.78
billion).
Sinopec initiated the privatization drive at IPO in 2000 in the
hopes of strengthening the competence of its core business and
improving the utilization of its capital resources.
There are only three listed subsidiaries yet to buy back, but
Sinopec didn't give details of the possible mode and the time.
Chen Tonghai, chairman of Sinopec, said that the bond offering
would leave positive impact on Sinopec's profitability and
shareholders value.
The bonds are priced at a discount from their face value while
purchasers are free to convert the bonds into H-shares at a price
of 10.76 Hong Kong dollars per share between June 4, 2007, and
April 14, 2014.
Bondholders may redeem the bonds on the maturity date at 121.1
percent of the issue price or on April 24, 2011 at 111.5 percent of
the issue price, with an annual yield rate of 2.75 percent.
Sinopec, the first Chinese company to be listed in Hong Kong,
New York, London and Shanghai, is an integrated energy and chemical
company with upstream, midstream and downstream operations.
It reported net profits up 28 percent to 50.7 billion yuan
(US$6.6 billion) last year, while income on its major business rose
31 percent to 1.04 trillion yuan.
(Xinhua News Agency April 18, 2007)