Former Swiber CEO fined $310,000 for false project announcement, insider trading

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The former chief executive officer of Swiber was fined for a charge over his involvement in Swiber making a false announcement on the SGX.

PHOTO: ST FILE

Megan Cheah

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SINGAPORE – Yeo Chee Neng, former chief executive officer of insolvent offshore oil and gas services contractor Swiber, has been fined $310,000 in total over four charges under the Securities and Futures Act.

The sentence was handed out on July 4.

He was fined $100,000 for a charge over his involvement in Swiber making a false announcement on the Singapore Exchange (SGX) relating to a US$710 million (S$958 million) project award.

He was fined $200,000 for a charge over his instructing his wife to sell their joint holdings in Swiber debentures while in possession of non-public and material information on the firm’s financial difficulties.

He drew two fines of $5,000 each, for two charges over failure to disclose changes in his interest in the debentures.

Yeo is also disqualified from being a director of any company or taking part in the management of any company for five years.

Five other charges – including insider trading and Yeo’s role in Swiber’s failure to notify SGX of required information – were taken into consideration during sentencing.

In a press release on July 5, the police stated that the charge related to the false statement concerned Swiber’s SGX announcement in December 2014 on securing a US$710 million award to provide services for an offshore field development project in West Africa.

Yeo was in 2014 a non-executive director of the firm, before he became deputy CEO in 2015, and CEO and group president in 2016.

Investigations revealed that Swiber, through its senior management, had known that the announcement was materially false, because the company’s wholly owned unit – Swiber Offshore Construction – had signed only a letter of intent authorising expenditure of up to US$2 million on the project.

The letter of intent merely stated that the contract price was “estimated to be approximately” US$710 million and was subject to review after the conclusion of a study by the subsidiary.

Yeo admitted that he approved Swiber’s announcement despite knowing that the letter and its terms – which a person in his position “ought reasonably to have known” – were false, said the police.

Swiber’s founder Raymond Goh and former CEO Francis Wong were fined $100,000 each for similar charges related to the false announcement.

As for the other two charges, investigations found that Swiber was due to redeem debentures worth $305 million in June, July and October 2016. It was negotiating with third parties to raise funds to fulfil the redemptions, among other operating and financial commitments.

Yeo, who was the group’s CEO at the time, was privy to non-public and material information and believed that if the fund raising failed, Swiber would go into default, said the police.

By June 29, 2016, he knew that it had not secured the funds and instructed his wife to sell Swiber debentures held in their joint account.

She placed an order that day to sell the debentures with a face value of $500,000, and liquidated half the position on July 5, 2016.

Swiber filed an application to wind up on July 27 that year, then withdrew the application and was placed under interim judicial management, defaulting on its outstanding debentures.

“In respect of his insider trading misconduct, Yeo avoided losses of $629,762,” added the police. He has forfeited this sum in full to the state.

In addition to the July 5 sale, ­Yeo’s wife sold more debentures with a face value totalling $750,000 in June and July 2016. After these sales, the couple held further Swiber debentures with a face value of $500,000.

Although Yeo knew about the sales, he failed to notify Swiber in writing of the changes in his interest in the debentures, which was required of him as a director and CEO of the company.

THE BUSINESS TIMES

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