SembMarine rises 12.8%, partly due to renewed merger hopes

Market watchers also attribute surge to rise in crude prices and broader vaccine optimism

Sembcorp Marine's Tuas Boulevard Yard. Trading activity on SembMarine yesterday totalled 217 million shares worth nearly $31 million.
Sembcorp Marine's Tuas Boulevard Yard. Trading activity on SembMarine yesterday totalled 217 million shares worth nearly $31 million. PHOTO: LIANHE ZAOBAO

Sembcorp Marine (SembMarine) shares rallied by up to nearly 13 per cent yesterday on robust turnover with market watchers attributing the surge to "beaten down cyclicals", a rise in crude prices, broader vaccine optimism - and renewed hopes for a merger.

Within the first two hours of trading, the counter shot up to 15 cents, gaining 1.7 cents or 12.8 per cent. By 12.30pm, the stock had pared some gains and was trading at 14.5 cents - up 1.2 cents or 9 per cent.

The stock eventually closed at 15 cents, up 12.78 per cent for the day.

SembMarine's advance outperformed the benchmark Straits Times Index, which finished up 1.27 per cent.

Trading activity on the counter was also higher with 217 million shares done worth nearly $31 million, making it the day's fifth most active by midday trading.

"The rise in crude oil prices is helping to drive interest in Sembcorp Marine, although this is all part of the broader vaccine optimism that has helped the assets, sensitive to both risk and growth outlook, climb into the start of the week," remarked Ms Pan Jingyi, senior market strategist at IG.

She added: "With hopes that the vaccine deployment in December could eventually lead to widespread vaccination, there has been anticipation of a recovery in demand within the crude oil market and therefore, its related industries. From a technical perspective, prices have also broken above the 50-day moving average, exhibiting a bullish signal."

Crude prices firmed during the Asian session yesterday, led by continued optimism since last week over the progress of coronavirus vaccine developments and their roll-outs.

The encouraging news has fuelled hope that economic activity could pick up and alongside that, energy demand, despite the continued rise in Covid-19 cases in many countries.

Brent, the key global oil benchmark, is up 0.4 per cent, while West Texas Intermediate rose 0.2 per cent.

Some suspect that one other factor that may be galvanising SembMarine's stock could be the big reshuffle at conglomerate Keppel Corp and more specifically the appointment of Mr Chua Hsien Yang as director of group M&A, a newly created position.

Mr Chua, currently the chief executive officer of Keppel DC Reit Management, has extensive experience in the real estate fund management and hospitality industries, including M&A (mergers and acquisitions), and will drive Keppel's sharpened and more disciplined M&A strategy, said the company in a statement.

Keppel had earlier said that its offshore and marine unit, hit by the pandemic-led oil slump, was under a strategic review where "all options, both organic and inorganic", were being considered.

That plus the leadership changes at Keppel, chiefly including an individual dedicated to drive M&A, has revived speculation of a mega merger between the two giant rig builders, Keppel Offshore & Marine and SembMarine - a long-anticipated and hoped for, but yet to happen, consolidation.

"In the current climate - rising competition and downturn - I don't see these two companies ending up standing alone forever. It is not unreasonable for the market to read it (Keppel's latest appointment) as one with an eye on industry consolidation," said a market watcher.

He added: "But it takes two hands to clap. There will be challenges. This will not be a merger of equals but more an acquisition. Will SembMarine go for it?"

THE BUSINESS TIMES

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on November 24, 2020, with the headline SembMarine rises 12.8%, partly due to renewed merger hopes. Subscribe