Hengli Petrochemical restructured its Singapore trading arm on Wednesday 29 April: ownership cut from 100% to 5%, with 95% transferred to a Chinese local government entity 1. The firm holds three months of crude inventory pre-positioned in Singapore, and will continue to settle oil procurement in Chinese yuan, bypassing dollar-rail systems. The structure is engineered to insulate physical refining operations from OFAC reach.
Hengli was designated under OFAC press release sb0472 on 24 April , the first time Treasury attached a nuclear-proliferation framing to an Iran sanctions case. General License V (GL-V), the wind-down for the original designation, expires on 24 May ; the 29 April restructure gives Hengli 24 days from sanctions to complete wind-down. The legal shield was published in advance: Beijing's Decree No. 835 issued on 13 April , eleven days before the Hengli designation, set the doctrine for state protection of designated state-adjacent entities. The decree had not been activated when Treasury moved against Hengli; the Singapore restructure is its first operational use.
The mechanics expose how OFAC's reach maps onto a refiner's actual operations. Sanctions designate the parent entity and its known subsidiaries; the SDN list is updated by name and address. By transferring 95% of the trading arm to a Chinese local government entity, Hengli has pushed the residual sanctions exposure below the 50% beneficial-ownership threshold OFAC uses to extend designation to subsidiaries. Singapore as a jurisdiction matters because it sits inside both the dollar-clearance system and Asian dark-fleet routing; the three months of pre-positioned crude is a buffer against the GL-V wind-down deadline. yuan-only settlements close the dollar exposure that would let Treasury enforce against correspondent banking.
Enforcement now depends on Beijing rather than Washington. China's embassy-level response to the original Hengli designation signalled that escalation would not come from the Foreign Ministry; Decree No. 835's activation is the harder track. Treasury would need to designate the Chinese local government entity that now holds 95% of the arm, which requires either a sub-national designation precedent (rare) or a national one (a step beyond the Hengli case). The structural question for the next 24 days is whether OFAC's enforcement architecture has the granularity to follow the corporate vehicle, or whether the Singapore restructure has simply moved Hengli's refining outside the reach of the sb0472 framing.
