

Olam International Ltd on Wednesday announced it has sold Taraori Rice Mills Private Ltd, the holding company for its rice milling assets in India, to Spanish rice and pasta manufacturer, Ebro Foods, for US$14.5 million.
" Through this sale we are monetising more than the book value of fixed investments, as well as releasing working capital - which will be used to reinforce our core supply chain and trading business in non-basmati rice from India and other origins for our conventional markets," said Rajeev Raina, global head of Olam's rice segment.
The basmati rice mill, located in Haryana, India was acquired in 2008 and has a processing capacity of 18 tonnes of paddy per hour.
hi guys. what are some of the external factors that will affect the share price movement of olam?
e.g. palm oil price affect golden agri etc.
cowon78 ( Date: 26-Feb-2013 16:56) Posted:
|
must goes above 1.70 leh....
sideway for so long.... too long won't be a good news...:(
stockwinner ( Date: 18-Feb-2013 17:13) Posted:
|
any news??? Last few minutes the price turn to green???
News indicated Temasek raised its stake  to 21% from 20% on Jan. 16 ??
HOPE  changes on the Top  5 in the group ???
Will  Good SINGAPORE COMPANies and skilled Singaporeans   better off  in future  ??
Tp after cny 1.8 :) or u may wan to short after that... I don't believe it will go down now, but only god knows and big tauke knows
Olam CEO: Share Price a 'Lagging Indicator' of Progress
|
|
|

Olam CEO Sunny Verghese defended the company's performance after the shares slumped nearly 40 percent over the past year, and called the stock move a lagging indicator of progress at the Singapore-listed commodities trader.
Olam shares, which  came under attack by U.S. short-seller Muddy WatersResearch  last year, have declined 37 percent over the past 12 months, far underperforming the broader  Straits Times Index  (STI), which rose 11.6 percent over the same period.
The shares are still the most heavily borrowed in Singapore's benchmark stock index, according to Reuters, which means that many investors continue to hold short positions in the stock. 
" The share price in our view is a lagging indicator and as we continue to execute and deliver similar results we'll continue to see the impact of that over the short and medium term," Verghese said, following the company's earnings announcement on Thursday. 
Olam, whose second-biggest shareholder is Singapore state investor Temasek, reported a 20 percent gain in net profit to S$154.1 million ($124 million) in the October to December period, from a year earlier. The sale and leaseback of almond orchards in California, which amounted to S$18.1 million ($14.6 million), contributed to the rise in profits. 
" This quarter has been a very good set of results, we need to consistently deliver those kinds of result for our share price to follow what has happened in our bond prices and what has happened to our debt costs," Verghese said. 
Verghese said the company will continue its legal battle against short-seller Carson Block and his firm Muddy Waters Research, which last year alleged accounting irregularities, aggressive spending and high debt levels at the company triggering a major sell-off in its shares. 
" We've served papers successfully on Muddy Waters, we have not been successful as yet serving on Carson Block. So we'll continue with our efforts to serve Carson as well directly," he said.
(Read More:  Is There Truth in Muddy Waters' Report on Olam?)
Credit Rating?
Verghese said he did not think it was necessary for Olam to have its bonds rated by a ratings agency, noting that 65 to 70 percent of companies in the industry remained unrated.
" You rate because you want to lower your cost of borrowing or you are not able to access certain debt pools of capital, in our case, our cost of borrowing is competitive. In fact, in some tenures, our cost of borrowing is lower than an investment grade rated peer company," he said. 
Last year, Muddy Waters offered to pay for Olam to get its bonds rated by ratings agency Standard and Poor's.
Verghese maintained that the company's leverage levels were not an issue, and remained " well within the covenants of our banks."
(Read More:  Muddy Waters Calls Temasek-backed Olam Fund-Raising a 'Bailout')
SINGAPORE, Feb 8 (IFR) - Independent research firm Muddy Waters has responded to
the release of Singapore commodities firm Olam's Q2 earnings release by
suggesting that the company's gross debt to Ebitda at 9.5 times and net debt to
Ebitda at 8.4 times " are dangerously high." While noting that the company is
reining in its capital expenditure - it recently cancelled the acquisition of a
sugar mill in Brazil - Muddy Waters is of the opinion that the yield on Olam's
outstanding bonds at 7%-8% presents an interest burden which is " not
sustainable." Olam's due 2017s were unchanged this morning at 92 for a 7.85%
yield and the company's due 2020s were 94 mid to yield 8.6%, also unchanged.
SINGAPORE, Feb 8 (Reuters) - Muddy Waters LLC kept its 
" strong sell" rating on Olam International Ltd 
the Singapore commodities firm's borrowings had increased in its 
second quarter. 
The short-seller also said that with Olam's bonds yielding 
around 7 percent to 8 percent, which it feels is too low, the 
company's interest burden is " not sustainable" . 
Olam said on Thursday it has begun a review of its business 
priorities and free cash flow targets as it announced a 20 
percent rise in second-quarter net profit. [ID:nL4N0B749C] 
" One of the bright spots for Olam investors is that the 
company appears to be trying to rein in its capex and 
acquisition spending," Muddy Waters said in a statement on 
Friday. 
Olam shares rose 0.6 percent to S$1.645, about 5 percent 
below the level before Muddy Waters attacked the company's 
aggressive spending and high debt in November. 
The shares had partly rebounded after Olam got full backing 
from powerful Singapore state investor Temasek Holdings Pte Ltd 
[TEM.UL], its second-biggest shareholder, for a 
bonds-with-warrants issue. 
The review and the termination of a proposed $240 million 
investment in a sugar miller in Brazil are the first signs that 
Olam is breaking away from its debt-funded series of 
acquisitions over the past few years.