The Market Online - At The Bell

Join our daily newsletter At The Bell to receive exclusive market insights

  • Wellard has announced it will continue to proceed with the sale of M/V Ocean Swagman to Heytesbury Holding Company for US$22 million
  • Nova has pulled out of the deal for Ocean Swagman after its subsidiary didn’t get Board approval
  • For the transaction to proceed further, Heytesbury will need shareholder approval and bank consent

Wellard has announced it will continue to proceed with the sale of M/V Ocean Swagman to Heytesbury Holding Company for US$22 million.

The transaction also includes a bareboat charter from Heytesbury to Wellard. The transaction is expected to be completed by September 30.

Wellard was initially unsure about the sale of the ship due to Heytesbury not completing the due diligence by the agreed deadline.

Nova Marine Carriers SA was originally going to purchase the Ocean Swagman for US$25.2 million but Nova’s subsidiary, Trim Shipping SA, did not get Board approval by the deadline.

Heytesbury is one of North Australia’s leading producers of quality export cattle and has been supplying beef to Asian markets for over thirty years.

The Ocean Swagman is a livestock vessel that has the capacity to transport 7000 cattle or 26,000 sheep.

It has been classified by the Registro Italiano Navale as a green star vessel due to its low emissions and pollution prevention design and systems.

The ship has an average of 110 air changes per hour, which is four times the Australian standard and 3.5 times the number of air changes per hour on a commercial airliner.

Heytesbury has achieved confirmation on the finance, due diligence, and vessel inspection. It is also a 11.42 per cent shareholder of Wellard and is therefore a related party.

For the transaction to proceed further, Heytesbury will need shareholder approval, bank consent and has to meet Singapore’s guidelines.

WLD by the numbers
More From The Market Online
Relaxed man

Electro Optic jumps as ASIC investigation fizzles out into measly $4M fine

Electro Optic Systems needs to cough up A$4 million to ASIC as a penalty, the concluding…
Military Drone

DroneShield tells ASX queries around director sell-off ‘hypothetical’ in ballsy response

DroneShield has issued a response to ASX compliance that can only be called 'ballsy' after everything…
Image of a battery glowing in neon

Li-S Energy reckons it can use an $8M Canberra ARENA grant to boost production 500-fold

Li-S Energy has popped +7% today through a red trend after confirming its receipt of a…
30mm cannon

Forget DroneShield: EOS sells computerised 30mm cannon to NATO country for C-UAS tech

Electro Optic Systems EOS has seen its shares jump +3.5% as the company reveals it's the…