China's Sinopec suspends top officials at trading arm:
sources
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[December 27, 2018]
By Chen Aizhu and Florence Tan
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Chinese state oil
major Sinopec <600028.SS> has suspended the two top officials at its
trading arm Unipec after the company suffered losses, sources with
knowledge of the matter said on Thursday.
Unipec's President Chen Bo, an industry veteran who helped the company
become one of the world's largest oil traders, has been suspended along
with the senior Communist Party representative at the company, Zhan Qi,
said five sources, who asked not to be identified due to the sensitivity
of the issue.
"The government inspectors were looking into the company's operations
for the past few years ... one of the problems they found was the severe
trading losses in the second half of this year because of wrong market
judgment," one of the sources said.
The sources did not refer to any wrongdoing on the part of the two men.
A spokesman at Sinopec, Asia's largest oil refiner, said in an emailed
statement that Chen and Zhan have been suspended from their duties due
to work-related reasons and that Deputy General Manager Chen Gang has
been appointed to handle the company's administrative work. Unipec
operates as per normal, he said.
Benchmark Brent and West Texas Intermediate (WTI) oil prices
<CLc1><LCOc1> have fallen by about 40 percent since hitting their
highest in four years in October, amid oversupply concerns as major
producers ramped up output while the United States unexpectedly issued
waivers that allowed countries to continue importing Iranian oil despite
sanctions.
A sudden widening of WTI's spread with Brent earlier this year also led
to hefty losses at major traders.
Chen Bo, who rose through the ranks to take on Unipec's top role,
started the company's liquefied natural gas (LNG) trading desk.
He also advocated boosting China's crude oil imports from the Americas
to help the world's largest oil importing country to diversify its
suppliers.
Oil traders said Chen's removal could create uncertainty at Unipec.
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Unipec's President Chen Bo speaks at the 34th Asia Pacific Petroleum
Conference (APPEC) in Singapore September 24, 2018. REUTERS/Edgar Su
"He's been a key man in the oil trading industry in the past decade," said a
veteran oil trader in Asia.
Shares in Sinopec <600028.SS> closed at 5.25 yuan ($0.76) on the Shanghai Stock
Exchange, the lowest in two years and down 6.7 percent from Wednesday.
"Sinopec's stock has been performing badly in the fourth quarter," said a
Beijing-based equity analyst who cannot be named due to local stock exchange
rules. The news today caused "a selloff and decline in prices," the analyst
added.
In October, Sinopec reported that third-quarter net profit fell from the
previous quarter, after rising for five consecutive quarters.
For the first nine months of 2018, the company reported a loss of 5.47 billion
yuan ($794 million) from foreign exchange rate changes and holdings in
derivative financial instruments, according to financial reports issued in
October.
In the first nine months of 2017, the company reported a gain of 1.13 billion
yuan.
Of the 2018 losses, 4 billion yuan occurred in third quarter, according to
Reuters calculations based on the financial reports.
Sinopec does not provide a breakdown for revenues at its trading unit.
(Reporting by Chen Aizhu and Florence Tan in SINGAPORE, Olga Yagova in MOSCOW
and Meng Meng in BEIJING; Editing by Richard Pullin and Christian Schmollinger)
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