Saturday 10 January 2015

Tanjung Offshore: some shareholder activism (2)

I blogged about Tanjung Offshore before.

Unfortunately, it looks like Tanjung's problems only have increased. In other words, shareholders should stay alert and active.

Firstly, on November 20, 2014 the company announced its third quarterly results, which were far from inspiring, in the contrary:



Secondly, the company announced:


"We refer to the article entitled “Tanjung Offshore to abort Bourbon RTO deal?” that appeared on The Edge Financial Daily today.

On behalf of the Board of Directors of Tanjung (“Board”), AFFIN Hwang Investment Bank Berhad (formerly known as HwangDBS Investment Bank Berhad) (“AFFIN Hwang IB”) wishes to announce that Tanjung and the Vendor Group (as defined in the announcement dated 5 June 2014 comprising Farid Khan Bin Kaim Khan and his business partners, Mower Tunggal Jaya PT, Megagold Indonesia PT and Zona Maju Mapan PT and their business partners and Bourbon Far East Pte Ltd) have, via an exchange of letter, mutually agreed to terminate the heads of agreements in relation to the Proposals (“HOAs”) on 29 December 2014 (“Termination Letter”) with immediate effect without any legal and financial recourse against each other."


May be not unexpected, the termination itself, but still, it always appeared to be a rather strange deal.

And why does the company need to react on an article of The Edge, why did it not proactively announce the news itself?

KiniBiz wrote "Was Tanjung Offshore venture doomed from the start?" (behind paywall). Some snippets:


Tanjung Offshore’s case was definitely not aided by their lack of disclosure of the deal, even to their own shareholders. A Bursa Malaysia announcement, which came out after the minority shareholders’ spokesperson had reached out to the media, was a statement that the deal would be negotiated to benefit all shareholders, and that yes, they were negotiating a waiver from Ekuinas for the three-year non-competition clause of the sale. Why is it that minority shareholders, who are most definitely shareholders, by the way, were marginalised to such an extent, as to not know of the proceedings of the deal? Tiger smells something fishy, and not of the good variety, either.

It all just seems a mess. Why did Tanjung Offshore not secure a waiver from Ekuinas before proposing the deal? Why was the deal not made with proper regard to global oil prices at the time? Did the group not see the potential fall in oil prices? Why were shareholders marginalised?


Thirdly, the company announced:


"The Board of Directors of Tanjung Offshore Berhad ("Company") wishes to announce that the Board has formed an Independent Committee to review and make recommendations on matters arising from recent media reports on the Company."


That looks like a good move, given all the events that have happened.

But it sounds very passive, the company should have been much more transparent and proactive, corporate governance standards appear to be very poor.

Also, what are "matters arising from recent media reports on the Company"? How do we know which media reports the Board of Directors has knowledge off? Why do they not just list the matters at hand, what exactly is the Independent Committee going to review?

In Focus Malaysia of Jan 10-16, 2015 an article "Tanjung Offshore has host of issues to tackle", some snippets:


A group of minority shareholders has claimed the company’s acquisition of an office building in Birmingham requires a shareholder nod, contrary to the company’s claim it did not need such an approval.The Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) is also believed to be looking at the company’s acquisition of the remaining 49% stake, worth RM34.3 mil, in Gas Generators (M) Sdn Bhd (Gastec, pictured) in October 2013. Based on documents provided to FocusM by minority shareholders, the company spent RM58.07 mil to purchase the Birmingham property. Thus, the deal exceeds the maximum 25% threshold and requires Tanjung Offshore to seek shareholder approval. “In this case, the minority shareholders’ interest has been compromised. The right to vote has been hijacked by the board of directors,” claims a representative for the group of minority shareholders, who collectively hold a 4.9% stake in the company.

3 comments:

  1. Adding on to your post, latest news on Tanjung Offshore Bhd.. They have suspended three company officials on the recommendation of its newly-set up independent committee amid speculation of a boardroom tussle.

    The company said that following an internal review, Tan Sri Tan Kean Soon and Muhammad Sabri Ab Ghani had been suspended from their executive functions and roles with immediate effect. They remain directors of the company.
    http://www.thestar.com.my/Business/Business-News/2015/01/29/Tanjung-suspends-3-key-officials-Move-comes-on-recommendation-by-its-newlyset-up-independent-committ/?style=biz

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  2. Thanks, will blog about this new development

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  3. tan kean soon is using tanjung and his son's company's royal family 'stakeholding' to syphon away their business la, easy as that. hms oil and gas is a direct competitor to tanjung offshore anyway.

    which boss is not going to be pissed off at this situation?

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