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Sources: Mercuria's former Beijing head joins China's Rongsheng

Sources: Mercuria's former Beijing head joins China's Rongsheng

According to internal memos and sources, the former head of Mercuria's Beijing office will join China's largest oil refining group Rongsheng Holdings as a senior executive.

Li Xinhua will assist Xiang Jingjiong as president of Rongsheng Holdings. Li will be responsible for Rongsheng’s coal, petrochemical and oil trading businesses in Singapore, according to sources who declined to name themselves as the move had not yet been announced.

Rongsheng has not yet commented.

Li has been with Mercuria in Geneva for 17 years, one of the top four commodities and energy traders on the planet.

Li's new role is to grow and manage Rongsheng’s expanding business. Two sources have described a period of challenges including an overcapacity of China's refinery industry, a lacklustre petrochemicals global market, and geopolitical uncertainties.

Rongsheng Singapore's trading desk is populated with former Chinese state oil traders. The firm also recently hired an Ex-PetroChina trader as the head of its Canadian crude oil trading.

Li, who joined Mercuria from the Chinese state-run Sinochem in 2008, was instrumental in expanding its China oil business. This included dealing with independent refineries in China.

"During his tenure at Xinhua, he has played a major role in the growth and transformation of the company." Mercuria's memo stated that he actively developed the independent refiners market in Shandong. This laid a solid basis for the oil trading business of the company.

Li Shuirong's son-in law, Xiang is Li Shuirong's new boss. Li Shuirong was the founder and chairman of Rongsheng, which he built from a small factory in the 1980s.

Rongsheng controls China’s largest private refiner Zhejiang Petrochemical Corp. It was also the first Chinese refiner to receive a significant investment from Saudi Aramco.

Mercuria memo stated that Wang Tiezheng will replace Li as the head of Mercuria Beijing. Wang is a senior iron-ore trader.

Mercuria has not responded to requests for comment. Siyi Liu contributed additional reporting from Singapore. Tony Munroe, Mark Potter and Tony Munroe edited the article.

(source: Reuters)