rongsheng international brands
SINGAPORE, Jun 2, 2022 (China Knowledge) – China’s leading chemical company Rongsheng Petrochemical (002493) has moved up two notches this year to rank the 8th place on Top 10 Most Valuable Chemicals Brands. It is the only Chinese chemical brand that placed in the global top list that include multinational companies like BASF, SABIC, LG Chem, Dow, Linde, LyondellBasel, Asahi Kasei, Mitsubishi Chemical and Shin-Etsu.
This latest Brand Finance Chemical 25 that published on May 31 also places China on the 4th place after Germany, U.S and Japan in terms of total brand value among the selected 25 chemical companies. The brand valuation company Brand Finance is a chartered accountancy firm regulated by the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales, and adopt internationally recognized standards on Brand Valuation – ISO 10668 and Brand Evaluation – ISO 20671.
With brand value worth US$2.3 bln, up 42.9% year on year, Rongsheng Petrochemical has become the most valuable Chinese brand in this year’s Chemical 25 ranking. Besides brand value, Brand Finance, also determines the relative strength of brands through a balanced scorecard of metrics evaluating marketing investment, stakeholder equity, and business performance. In accordance to Rongsheng Petrochemical’s evaluation, its brand’s strength index moved up from an A+ rating in 2021 to an AA- rating in 2022.
What differentiate Rongsheng Petrochemical with domestic and foreign peers is the company’s emphasis and commitment on sustainability and green development. For example, it purifies carbon dioxide in its refining-petrochemical integrated complex, and using it to produce downstream chemical products. Renewal energy and material wise it is currently the largest supplier of solar-grade EVA for the photovoltaic industry as well as the largest supplier of food grade recycled PET bottle flakes in China.
In addition to its brand value Rongsheng Holding as a group is also listed in the Fortune Global 500 in terms of sales revenue. Last year the Chinese giant, as a group, was placed 255th with USD 44.7 bln revenue achieved in 2020. The latest Fortune Global 500 in 2022 to be published next month is expected to elevate many placings due to its whopping increase in revenue last year.
Rongsheng Petrochemical (brand value up 43% to US$2.3 billion) achieved very strong growth this year, rising two places in the chemicals ranking and jumpingfrom 10th to 8th place amongst global chemicals brands. The Chinese brand owns various globally significant facilities, including an integrated refining-petrochemical complex with the refining capacity of 40 million tons per annum.
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Rongsheng Petrochemical (brand value up 43% to US$2.3 billion) achieved very strong growth this year, rising two places in the chemicals ranking and jumping from 10th to eighth place amongst global chemicals brands. The Chinese brand owns various globally significant facilities, including an integrated refining-petrochemical complex with the capacity to produce 40 million tons of plastics per annum.
As the world’s largest producer of various plastics, Rongsheng Petrochemical faces both risks and opportunities from increasing global concerns about the usage of plastics and carbon emissions. The brand value of this giant Chinese brand is growing in connection with increased research and development of clean technologies, while its world-leading refining-petrochemical complex recovers and purifies carbon dioxide from the plants for use as feedstock to produce downstream chemical products (polycarbonates).
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SHANGHAI, Oct 30 (Reuters) - China Rongsheng, the country’s largest private shipbuilder, has secured a cash lifeline that could be worth up to HK$3.23 billion dollars and is looking to change its name to reflect its shift into oil exploration.
Shares in heavily indebted Rongsheng, which were suspended on Aug. 29 after the company said it was in the process of restructuring, surged almost 17 percent higher after trading resumed on Thursday. They reversed gains, and were down 3.7 pct by 0217 GMT.
Rongsheng said late on Wednesday it would issue warrants worth HK$510 million to a Cayman Islands-incorporated investment firm wholly owned by private equity investor Wang Ping, which would entitle subscribers to buy up to 1.7 billion new shares at HK$1.60 each.
This would raise about HK$3.23 billion for Rongsheng, it said. A warrant entitles the holder to buy stock from the issuer at a specific price within a time frame.
The price of the new shares is at a 17.65 percent premium to Rongsheng’s closing price of HK$1.36 per share on Aug. 28, when it last previously traded. It said the subscription shares represent 19.36 percent of the firm’s issued share capital.
Rongsheng, which builds Brazilian miner’s Vale mega-iron ore carriers, came close to insolvency last year before clinching an agreement with banks to extend its loans until end-2015.
As one of the Jiangsu region’s largest employers, the firm has received copious support from the government, which is currently helping Rongsheng with its restructuring.
Rongsheng also said it had signed a debt agreement with a syndicate of domestic banks in Anhui province that would extend its debt payments to the end of 2015.
Rongsheng has been one of the most prolific casualties of the global shipping slump. The industry is still trying to shake off a glut of ships ordered before the crisis which has sunk freight rates and caused many shipbuilding orders to be delayed or cancelled. ($1 = 7.7552 Hong Kong dollar) ($1 = 6.1136 Chinese yuan) (Reporting by Brenda Goh; Editing by Miral Fahmy)