Gas Oil

Investors jittery as Lekoil shares crumble by 41% over Metallon pullout

London-listed oil firm with operations in Nigeria, Lekoil Limited, has suffered 41 per cent crash in its shares as the pullout by the majority shareholder of Lekoil Cayman, South African miner, Metallon, reportedly weighed in on the company.

The value of the company’s shares dipped 41 per cent at 0.90 pence, setting jitters down the spines of investors.

In a Regulatory note sighted by Platforms Africa, Lekoil Limited (Cayman) notes that (it) is in dispute with Lekoil Nigeria about the day-to-day control of the Lekoil Group….

A firm and its stakeholders in crisis

The fire ignited by the boardroom tussle among Lekoil shareholders has earlier consumed CEO, Lekan Akinyanmi in June. Akinyanmi was fired over what the company called governance breach arising from a loan dispute.

Lekoil Limited (Cayman) has a minority 40 per cent stake in Lekoil Nigeria Limited and Akinyanmi was the CEO of the entire operation prior to his ouster.

The Nigerian unit was financed by loans acquired through Lekoil Cayman and is entitled to over 90 per cent of the economic benefits of Lekoil Nigeria,

The Metalion’s Pull out

Metallon with 15.1 per cent stake in Lekoil Ltd was accused of staging a hostile takeover last year when it convinced other shareholders to turn the heat on Akinyanmi, who it accused of poor governance practices. The departure of Metallon creates more uncertainty for an already troubled company.

This situation has left the London-listed Lekoil Cayman gasping for survival as it forages for cash to keep the company going.

The task of raising financing may become tougher considering that Lekoil Cayman has been unable to publish its annual financial report in June. It has asked for more time from its regulator on the London Stock Exchange.

“The Company has received notification from Lekoil Nigeria that it intends to abide by the Shareholders Agreement but that governance decisions, including decisions related to budgets, financial, operational and business plans, shall be made by Lekoil Nigeria,” said the note from Lekoil.

However, Lekoil Nigeria said it will no longer fund any of the costs of the Company from the cash flow generated from its producing asset, Otakikpo.

Lekoil’s reaction

The London-listed Lekoil Cayman admitted that it has limited control over the day-to-day operations of Lekoil Nigeria and its subsidiaries, and that it will take legal advice to recover as much value from its assets as possible.

Lekoil Limited has also said it intended to pursue its former CEO to recover the loan. It believes $800,000 is immediately payable, with $400,000 due on September 9.

Lekoil Limited provided the majority of funding for the acquisition of the Lekoil Nigeria assets, as well as working capital for a period of time.

The Company said it raised over US$260m of equity on the London Stock Exchange and the majority of these funds were invested into Nigeria.

Threat of CFA and ‘gloomy days’ ahead

Lekoil Limited is seeking to raise a convertible facility agreement (CFA) worth £200,000 from Hadron Master Fund and TDR enterprises to fund its legal battle against Lekoil Nigeria.

Hadron is linked to a company that has a 4.66 per cent stake in Lekoil. TDR is controlled by Tom Richardson, who Metallon backed as a non-executive director of Lekoil. An unnamed third party will also provide some cash.

Related posts

Reps direct NNPC to end petrol scarcity

Our Reporter

Shell commissions indigenous firm to carry out largest gas market survey in Nigeria

Emeka Ugwuanyi

Petrol subsidy hits N905.27bn, oil rises to $79.71

Our Reporter

Wike declares 19 suspected illegal refinery kingpins wanted, orders director’s arrest

Our Reporter

Saudi Aramco’s profit drops to $121bn in 2023

Editor

Oil, gas firms flare 260.17bn scf in 11 months worth N282bn

Editor