china rongsheng heavy industries group holdings brands
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The Board is pleased to announce that the English name of the Company has been changed from "China Rongsheng Heavy Industries Group Holdings Limited" to "China Huarong Energy Company Limited" and the Chinese name of the Company has been changed from
The stock short name of shares of the Company for trading on the Stock Exchange will be changed from "CH RONGSHENG" to "HUARONG ENERGY" in English and from "中國 熔盛重工" to "華榮能源" in Chinese with effect from 9:00 a.m. on 24 April 2015. The stock
Reference is made to the announcement of China Huarong Energy Company Limited (formerly known as China Rongsheng Heavy Industries Group Holdings Limited) (the "Company") dated 29 October 2014 and the circular of the Company dated 17 February
The Board is pleased to announce that the English name of the Company has been changed from "China Rongsheng Heavy Industries Group Holdings Limited" to "China Huarong Energy Company Limited" and the Chinese name of the Company has been changed from
The stock short name of shares of the Company for trading on the Stock Exchange will be changed from"CH RONGSHENG" to "HUARONG ENERGY" in English and from "中國熔 盛重工" to "華榮能源" in Chinese with effect from 9:00 a.m. on 24 April 2015. The stock
pleased to announce that, the English name of the Company has been changed from "China Rongsheng Heavy Industries Group Holdings Limited" to "China Huarong Energy Company Limited" ("Huarong Energy", the "Company" or "We", and together with its subsidiaries, the "Group"; stock code: 01101.HK) and the Chinese name of the Company has been changed
Registrar of Companies in the Cayman Islands on 18 March 2015 and the Certificate of Registration of Alteration of Name of Registered Non-Hong Kong Company was issued by the Registrar of Companies in Hong Kong on 17 April 2015. The stock short name of shares of the Company for trading on the Stock Exchange will be changed from "CH RONGSHENG" to
Huarong Energy is pursuing its strategy of business transformation and has completed the acquisition of 60% interest in the project (the "Kyrgyzstan Project") involving four oilfields located in the Fergana Valley of the Republic of Kyrgyzstan in September 2014. We are proactively transforming into an oil and natural gas development and production operator. We believe that the change of company name would better reflect the expansion of the Group"s business scope and diversified operations with a more accurate display of the Group"s strategic positioning, and offer the Company a new corporate identity and image.
Mr. Sean Wang, Chief Financial Officer and Executive Director of Huarong Energy, said, the lack of exploration expertise have long generated an inaccurate perception of Kyrgyzstan as low oil reserves country. In fact, pursuant to the drilling condition and the information currently obtained after drilling operation and research for more than two years, we believe the oil reserve in Kyrgyzstan is abundant, and which strongly support our optimistic view of the energy project there. In recent years, in light of the "Silk Road Economic Belt" strategy introduced by China, the Kyrgyzstan government continued to encourage foreign capital investing in their oil and gas industry. KnprnmKepHeqJTernm ("Kyrgyzjer Neftegaz" Limited Liability Company*), a non-wholly owned subsidiary of Huarong Energy, has been regarded as the company investing the most in the oil and gas industry of Kyrgyzstan within the past 15 years and has currently 13 drilling rigs undergoing drilling operation in Kyrgyzstan.
RUGAO, China/SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Deserted flats and boarded-up shops in the Yangtze river town of Changqingcun serve as a blunt reminder of the area"s reliance on China Rongsheng Heavy Industries Group, the country"s biggest private shipbuilder.A view of the Rongsheng Heavy Industries shipyard is seen in Nantong, Jiangsu province December 4, 2013. REUTERS/Aly Song
The shipbuilder this week predicted a substantial annual loss, just months after appealing to the government for financial help as it reeled from industry overcapacity and shrinking orders. Rongsheng lost an annual record 572.6 million yuan ($92 million) last year, and lost 1.3 billion yuan in the first half of this year.
While Beijing seems intent to promote a shift away from an investment-heavy model, with companies reliant on government cash injections, some analysts say Rongsheng is too big for China to let fail.
Local media reported in July that Rongsheng had laid off as many as 8,000 workers as demand slowed. Three years ago, the company had about 20,000 staff and contract employees. This week, the shipbuilder said an unspecified number of workers had been made redundant this year.
“Without new orders it’s hard to see how operations can continue,” said one worker wearing oil-spattered overalls and a Rongsheng hardhat, adding he was still waiting to be paid for September. He didn’t want to give his name as he feared he could lose his job.
“Morale in the office is quite low, since we don’t know what is the plan,” said a Rongsheng executive, who declined to be named as he is not authorized to speak to the media. “We have been getting orders but can’t seem to get construction loans from banks to build these projects.”
While Rongsheng has won just two orders this year, state-backed rival Shanghai Waigaoqiao Shipbuildinghas secured 50, according to shipbroker data. Singapore-listed Yangzijiang Shipbuildinghas won more than $1 billion in new orders and is moving into offshore jack-up rig construction, noted Jon Windham, head industrials analyst at Barclays in Hong Kong.
Frontline, a shipping company controlled by Norwegian business tycoon John Fredriksen, ordered two oil tankers from Rongsheng in 2010 for delivery earlier this year. It now expects to receive both of them in 2014, Frontline CEO Jens Martin Jensen told Reuters.
Greek shipowner DryShips Inchas also questioned whether other large tankers on order will be delivered. DryShips said Rongsheng is building 43 percent of the Suezmax vessels - tankers up to 200,000 deadweight tons - in the current global order book. That"s equivalent to 23 ships, according to Rongsheng data.
Speaking at a quarterly results briefing last month, DryShips Chief Financial Officer Ziad Nakhleh said Rongsheng was “a yard that, as we stated before, is facing difficulties and, as such, we believe there is a high probability they will not be delivered.” DryShips has four dry cargo vessels on order at the Chinese firm.
Rongsheng declined to comment on the Dryships order, citing client confidentiality. “For other orders on hand, our delivery plan is still ongoing,” a spokesman said.
At least two law firms in Shanghai and Singapore are acting for shipowners seeking compensation from Rongsheng for late or cancelled orders. “I’m now dealing with several cases against Rongsheng,” said Lawrence Chen, senior partner at law firm Wintell & Co in Shanghai.
Billionaire Zhang Zhirong, who founded Rongsheng in 2005 and is the shipyard"s biggest shareholder, last month announced plans to privatize Hong Kong-listed Glorious Property Holdingsin a HK$4.57 billion ($589.45 million) deal - a move analysts said could raise money to plug Rongsheng"s debts.
Meanwhile, Rongsheng’s shipyard woes have already pushed many people away from nearby centers, and others said they would have to go if things don’t pick up. Some said they hoped the local government might step in with financial support.
The Rugao government did not respond to requests for comment on whether it would lend financial or other support to Rongsheng. Annual reports show Rongsheng has received state subsidies in the past three years.
The exodus has left row upon row of deserted apartments, with just a few old garments strewn on the floor and empty name tags to show for what was a bustling community before China’s economic growth began to slow and credit tightened at a time when global shipping, too, turned down.
China Rongsheng Heavy Industries Group Holdings Limited is an investment holding company. The Company has four segments: shipbuilding, offshore engineering, marine engine building and engineering machinery. The Company commenced the construction of its shipyard in Nantong, Jiangsu Province. As of December 31, 2009, the Company鈥檚 shipyard covers approximately four million square meters and occupies 3,058 meters of Yangtze River shoreline. The Company operates its marine engine building business through Rong An Power Machinery. In October 2009, Rong An Power Machinery delivered its marine engine product, a Wartsila 6RT-flex68D low-speed marine diesel engine. The Company through Zhenyu Machinery offers 16 varieties of hydraulic excavators and two varieties of hydraulic crawler cranes. Its products include bulk carriers, crude oil tankers, containerships, offshore engineering products, low-speed marine diesel engines and small to mid-size excavators and cranes for construction and mining.
Ch Rongsheng isa leadinglarge-scaleheavy industry enterprisegroup.It possesses of two manufacturing bases of shipbuilding and offshore engineering in Nantong of Jiangsu Province and diesel engine in Hefei of Anhui Province both approved by NDRC, coveringwide services ranging from shipbuilding, offshoreengineering,power engineering, engineering machineryandetc. Until Dec.With thevision of “cultivate world first-class employees and create world first-class enterprise”,the spirit of “integrity-based, the pursuit of excellence”, and the responsibility ofrevitalizingnational industry, it runs fast toward the great goal of world first-class diversified heavy industry group.
The China Rongsheng Heavy Industries (RSHI) Group Holdings is a leading large-scale heavy industry conglomerate with operations covering shipbuilding, marine engineering, power engineering, construction machinery and other related fields. The China RSHI Group was successfully listed on the Main Board of The Stock Exchange of Hong Kong on 19th November 2010.
Liang studied for a Master’s in Corporate Management at Tongji University and undertook a period of work experience at Berlin Technical University. He is Deputy Treasurer at China Rongsheng Heavy Industries Group Holdings.
Rongsheng has a vertically centralised treasury structure. We have two production bases located respectively in Rugao, Nantong and Hefei, Anhui Province. The group headquarters are in Hong Kong and Shanghai, with treasury department composed of seven employees, responsible for FX and interest rate risk management, financing, cash management and bank relationship management.
Our main cash management banks include Bank of China, the Export-Import Bank of China and China Development Bank, which are also our biggest credit banks.
The ship-building industry differs significantly from ordinary manufacturing industries in that even a single product can have great value and the building cycle is very long. Therefore, during the building process the shipyard will authorise a bank to issue a refund guarantee to the ship-owner based on building milestones. Currently, the guarantee issuing banks that are most acceptable to overseas ship-owners are Bank of China, the Export-Import Bank of China and China Development Bank.
Meanwhile we also leverage the combined advantages of different banks, such as the trade financing of Bank of China, the project loans of China Construction Bank, and the project mortgage of China Everbright Bank.
Due to the nature of our industry, we are not able to physically pool our cash yet, because most of our collections have to be swept to the specified account of ship-building business. However, we do use centralised management to get a real-time understanding of group cash position and future cash flow.
(Bloomberg) — China Rongsheng Heavy Industries Group Holdings Ltd., which hasn’t announced any 2012 ship orders, may find winning deals even harder as a company owned by its billionaire chairman faces an insider-trading probe.
China’s biggest shipbuilder outside state control tumbled 16 percent yesterday in Hong Kong after the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission said traders including Chairman Zhang Zhi Rong’s Well Advantage Ltd. made more than $13 million of illegal profits buying shares of Nexen Inc. ahead of a takeover announcement by CNOOC Ltd. The SEC also won a court order freezing about $38 million of the traders’ assets.
Rongsheng, based in Shanghai, has tumbled 87 percent since a November 2010 initial public offering because of concerns about delivery delays and a global slump in ship orders caused by a glut of vessels. The shipbuilder, which operates facilities in Jiangsu and Anhui provinces, also said yesterday that first- half profit probably dropped “significantly” because of falling prices and slowing orders.
The probe won’t affect day-to-day operations run by Chief Executive Officer Chen Qiang, as Chairman Zhang only has a non- executive role, Rongsheng said in a statement yesterday. Zhang wasn’t available for comment yesterday, according to Doris Chung, public relations manager at Glorious Property Holdings Ltd., a developer he controls.
Chen isn’t aware of Zhang’s personal business dealings and he has no plans to leave Rongsheng, he said yesterday by text message in reply to Bloomberg News questions. The CEO may help reassure potential customers as he is well-known among shipowners, said Lawrence Li, an analyst at UOB Kay Hian Holdings Ltd.
Zhang owns 46 percent of Rongsheng and 64 percent of Glorious Property, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The developer dropped 1.7 percent to close at HK$1.16 in Hong Kong today after falling 11 percent yesterday. Zhang’s listed holdings are worth about $1.2 billion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Zhang, who holds a Master’s of Business Administration degree from Asia Macau International Open University, started in building materials and construction subcontracting before getting into real estate. Construction of his first project, in Shanghai, began in 1996, according to Glorious Property’s IPO prospectus. He got into shipbuilding after discussing the idea with Chen at a Shanghai Young Entrepreneurs’ Association event in 2001, according to Rongsheng’s sale document. He formed the company that grew into Rongsheng three years later.
“People in his hometown think Zhang is a legend as he expanded two companies in different sectors so quickly,” said Ji Fenghua, chairman of Nantong Mingde Group, a shipyard located next to Rongsheng’s facility in Nantong city, Jiangsu province. The billionaire maintains a low profile, said Ji, who has never seen him at meetings organized by the local government.
Rongsheng raised HK$14 billion in its 2010 IPO, selling shares at HK$8 each. The company’s market value has fallen by about $6.1 billion to $1 billion, based on data compiled by Bloomberg.
Rongsheng, which also makes engines and excavators, had outstanding orders for 98 ships as of June 2012, according to Clarkson. It employed 7,046 people at the end of last year, according to its annual report. The shipbuilder has built a pipe-laying vessel for Cnooc and it has a strategic cooperation agreement with the energy company.
The country’s largest shipyard outside state control is in discussions with the cities of Rugao and Nantong and some ministry-level departments related to the shipping industry, Rongsheng spokesman William Li said by phone today. The company said July 5 it was seeking financial assistance from the government after a plunge in orders forced it to reduce production and “restructure” its workforce. Li declined to elaborate.
“It will be difficult to see an obvious recovery before the end of next year” in demand for ships, Zhang Shouguo, vice president of the China Shipowner’s Association, said in a telephone interview today. “The shipping industry has been in a downturn for at least three years.”
Rongsheng and other Chinese shipmakers are struggling as a global vessel glut makes orders more difficult to win and pushes down prices. China has also identified shipbuilding as an industry with overcapacity, for which authorities won’t approve new projects and will limit financing as part of Premier Li Keqiang’s campaign to reduce the economy’s reliance on exports and investment for growth.
Two calls each to Rugao and Nantong local governments’ media offices seeking comment went unanswered today. Rongsheng has a production base in Nantong, a prefecture-level city that has administrative jurisdiction over Rugao.
“We expect shipyard failures could become a reality in China if current conditions persist,” Barclays Plc analysts Jon Windham and Esme Pau wrote in a report to clients yesterday. “Those yards not facing such harsh financial difficulties could increase their market and pricing power.” The Hong Kong-based analysts lowered their rating on Rongsheng’s shares to “underweight” from “equalweight.”
A third of the shipyards in China, the world’s biggest shipbuilding nation, may be shut in about five years, the China Association of National Shipbuilding Industry said last week. The order book of Chinese shipbuilders fell 23 percent at the end of May from a year earlier, according to data from the shipbuilders’ group.
Rongsheng said last week it may post a net loss for the first half. The Shanghai-based company reported an annual loss of 573 million yuan ($93.5 million) last year and a 50 percent drop in revenue. The Wall Street Journal reported on July 3 that the shipbuilder had laid off about 8,000 workers.
Shares of Rongsheng rose 3.8 percent to 82 Hong Kong cents at close of trading in the city. The stock has plunged 34 percent this year, compared with a 9 percent decline for the benchmark Hang Seng Index.
Overcapacity is at the “core” of the plunge in profits for China’s shipbuilders, the shipowner association’s Zhang said. The group’s membership is made of the nation’s largest shipping companies, including China Ocean Shipping Group, China Shipping Group Co. and Sinotrans Ltd.
Vice Premier Zhang Gaoli said in May that China must “strictly forbid” approvals of projects in industries with overcapacity, including those in the ship-building sector, state broadcaster China Central Television reported. The Economic Information Daily reported today that China will implement “strict” financial policies to curb overcapacity.
“There is a saying in Chinese: ‘Save the one that needs it the most, not the poorest,’” Zhang said. “If Rongsheng’s troubles are temporary, and the company’s other management controls are good, and the company still has a promising future, then yes, the government can step in and give it a helping hand.”
The No 4 dock at Jiangsu Rongsheng Heavy Industries Co Ltd"s Nantong shipbuilding base on May 26, 2012. With a dimension of 139.5*580m,the dock is equipped with a 1600-T gantry crane, the world"s largest. [Photo/chinadaily.com.cn]
China Rongsheng Heavy Industries Group Holdings Ltd, the nation"s largest private shipbuilder, may seek "cooperation with one or two ship builders" in 2013 or 2014, grasping the opportunity emerging from an industry recession, according to Xu Yifei, assistant president of Jiangsu Rongsheng.
"We have the intention to form strategic cooperation with one or two well-established shipbuilders next year or the year after if conditions are right," Xu told chinadaily.com.cn, "we"d like to find some coastal docks for our offshore engineering products."
In response to this round of recession, Rongsheng has been actively upgrading technology and design. It has also put more focus on the offshore engineering sector to further diversify its business.
Rongsheng is setting up its offshore engineering company in Singapore, aiming to take advantage of Singapore"s technology and existing market to deepen its penetration in the global offshore engineering market, according to Xu.
The company entered the marine engineering sector years ago. China"s first deepwater pipe-laying crane vessel, known as Hai Yang Shi You 201, was built by Rongsheng. The vessel can lay pipes at depths of 3000 meters and lift 4000 metric tons and will operate at the South China Sea"s Liwan 3-1 gas field.
Rongsheng"s president, Chen Qiang, said in an earlier interview that he hoped orders from marine engineering will make up about 40 percent of the company"s new orders this year.
Late Tuesday, a company official told The Wall Street Journal about 8,000 employees had been laid off in recent months, and some workers had been protesting outside the company"s production base in east China"s Nantong city. Rongsheng employed about 20,000 people at the beginning of the year.
Lei Dong, secretary to Rongsheng"s president, had said that the layoffs weren"t a sign of financial trouble and were the result of a restructuring that aims to move its focus away from bulk carriers toward offshore vessels.