(Corrects 7th paragraph to show Nelson Goh was with Hin Leong previously)
By Chen Aizhu
BEIJING (Reuters) - Singapore investment firm New Silkroutes Group Ltd is set to launch two new China-focused funds worth $1.6 billion in total and is looking to expand its oil trading business with Chinese customers following a restructure.
The former loss-making information technology firm repositioned itself last year as an investment company under new management led by Goh Jin Hian, a former healthcare executive and son of Singapore's former Prime Minister Goh Chok Tong.
The group expects to obtain Singapore licenses shortly for a $600 million healthcare fund and another with a minimum size of $1 billion focused on energy infrastructure, company executives told Reuters in an interview in Beijing.
"We're interested in allocating funds in infrastructure like oil storage or even a stake in a refinery," said chief executive Goh.
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Seed funding of $200 million for the healthcare fund has been agreed with a private Chinese group involved in aluminium smelting and property, the executives said.
New Silkroutes' energy business, the International Energy Group, currently contributes about 90 percent of group turnover and is expected to generate revenue for the year ending June 2017 of $225 million, up four fold from a year earlier, they said.
The unit, which started as a gas oil and fuel oil trader, is branching into crude oil. This week, it appointed Nelson Goh, previously of Singapore oil trading firm Hin Leong Group, as head of crude oil, adding to an oil products trader and coal trader.
The company aims to work with more Chinese customers, expanding trades in renminbi, the Chinese currency, to attract new business in oil and coal, the executives said.
The firm intends to pre-sell oil cargoes to customers and receive payment in yuan in the form of 90-day letter of credits.
New Silkroutes reached a deal this week to work together with a unit of state-owned China Shipbuilding Industry Corp, CSEMC on oil procurement from the Middle East and as well as investing in storage facilities.
(Reporting by Chen Aizhu; Editing by Richard Pullin)