Where Does Noble Probe Leave $3.5 Billion Restructuring?

Where Does Noble Investigation Leave $3.5 Billion Restructuring?

(Bloomberg) -- After more than a year of marathon restructuring negotiations, Noble Group Ltd. looked to be entering the home stretch. The debt deal, which chairman Paul Brough described as "probably the most complex restructuring ever undertaken in Asia," had run the gauntlet of all-night negotiations and court hearings. It was due to complete in less than a week.

Now the $3.5 billion restructuring hangs in the balance after Singaporean authorities on Tuesday announced a multi-agency investigation into the Asia-focused commodity trader, including a probe by Singapore’s white-collar crime squad.

Should the deal fail, it would be a blow to Noble’s creditors, including hedge funds Taconic Capital Advisors, Varde Partners and Owl Creek Asset Management, as well as Deutsche Bank AG and ING Groep NV. Noble Group said Wednesday it will continue to work toward implementing its proposed restructuring within the previously disclosed timelines and it’s in the best interest of all shareholders and creditors.

The announcement of the probe came as a surprise to the company’s creditors and advisers, according to three people working on the deal, who asked not to be named discussing a private matter. They had been racing to complete the restructuring ahead of a deadline, the so-called "longstop date" of Nov. 27. According to an announcement last week, they were due to make it -- just -- with the deal due to be completed next Monday, Nov. 26.

How could the Singapore probe delay Noble’s restructuring?

The Singaporean regulators on Tuesday suggested that the probe could delay the restructuring deal. "Trading can only start after restructuring has been completed and this is in turn dependent on our review,” said SGX RegCo, the regulatory arm of the Singapore Exchange.

The circular to shareholders that the company published in August shows how the Singaporean regulators’ approval is crucial for the deal.

One of the conditions without which the restructuring cannot go ahead is for the SGX to give consent for the restructured entity to be re-listed.

Another of the so-called "conditions precedent" is for the Securities Industry Council and the Monetary Authority of Singapore to grant waivers needed so that the restructuring can go through without Noble’s creditors -- who are due to take control of the company -- being forced to make a buyout offer for its shares.

Why would a delay matter?

The "longstop date" for the Noble restructuring is Nov. 27, according to a copy of its English scheme of arrangement, which was approved by a U.K. court last week. That means that if the restructuring hasn’t been completed by then, the schemes of arrangement -- by which Noble is implementing its debt restructuring -- "shall be of no effect."

Still, the scheme of arrangement provides that the date can be pushed back to any day until Dec. 31, with the agreement of Noble and its creditors.

A bigger problem may be that Nov. 27 is the day on which a key waiver expires. Granted by Noble’s shareholders under a "whitewash" resolution at a meeting in August, the waiver allows the deal to go ahead without Noble’s creditors being forced to make a buyout offer for its shares.

In its circular to shareholders, Noble said that Singapore’s Securities Industry Council had allowed it to go ahead with the restructuring without a buyout offer being made, as long as the deal was completed within three months of the approval of the whitewash resolution.

What might Noble and its creditors do now?

Noble and its creditors will make contact with the Singaporean authorities to work out if there’s anything they can do to persuade the regulators to approve the deal ahead of the Nov. 27 deadline, the people familiar with the matter said.

That could involve, for example, agreeing that the restructured Noble Group would guarantee to pay any fine that arises from the Singaporean investigation. However, at the moment it’s not clear what the authorities require to wrap up the restructuring.

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