Noble Group's $2 Billion Loan Deal Prompts Default-Swap Question

Noble Group's $2 Billion Loan Deal Prompts Default-Swap Question

(Bloomberg) -- Just days after Noble Group Ltd. secured a $2 billion loan extension, some investors in the credit protection market are looking to get paid.

The International Swaps & Derivatives Association has been asked to decide whether a four-month loan extension from the Hong Kong-based company’s banks constitutes a so-called restructuring credit event. An anonymous party filed a petition on Monday asking the determinations committee to consider the question, which could mean payouts for holders of credit-default swaps on almost $5 billion of company debt.

A London-based media representative for Noble Group, once Asia’s leading commodity trader, declined to comment.

Noble Group had been in talks for weeks over the facility, which underpins its global oil business and was due to expire later this month. The commodity trader reached a preliminary agreement with its banks to extend the facility for 120 days at just under its current $2 billion limit, Bloomberg reported on Friday.

The extension resets the clock on the company’s attempts to find new investors, sell assets or shutter unprofitable businesses. With its new chairman, Paul Brough -- a restructuring specialist who worked on the liquidation of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. -- Noble Group has hired investment banks Morgan Stanley and Moelis & Co. to review its options.

Noble Group remains under severe pressure after enduring several turbulent years marked by losses, credit-rating downgrades, and accusations of improper accounting that the company has denied. The trader’s market capitalization has fallen from more than $10 billion to just $300 million. S&P Global Ratings last month warned of the risk of a default within a year.

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