Sunday, September 6, 2015

Glencore halts trading ahead of plan to cut US$30b debt

Glencore halts trading ahead of plan to cut US$30b debt

[MELBOURNE] Glencore, the world's largest publicly traded commodity supplier, halted its stock in Hong Kong Monday ahead of an announcement on plans to cut net debt of about US$30 billion.
Baar, Switzerland-based Glencore, which last week posted its biggest weekly decline in London trading since going public in 2011, could consider options including a suspension of dividends and the sale of assets or shares to reduce its debt pile, according to National Australia Bank Ltd.
Glencore has lost more than half its market value this year, and along with BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto Group has seen profits slump as commodity prices plunged and touched a 16-year low last month. Standard & Poor's cut Glencore's outlook to negative from stable last week, saying weaker growth in China will weigh on copper and aluminum prices.
The commodities producer and trader is rated at BBB, the second-lowest investment grade, by S&P and Glencore is probably seeking to avoid any downgrade to BBB-, said Michael Bush, head of credit research at National Australia. Glencore relies on credit to finance commodity deals, meaning costs could increase if its rating were cut.
The rout in both commodity prices and miners' shares means several options available to Glencore to reduce its debt are currently unattractive, Bush said by phone from Melbourne. "A plan to reduce gearing in the current environment is going to be something of an exercise in value destruction." Glencore slumped 6 per cent in London on Friday to close at 123.15 pence, and declined 1.2 per cent in Hong Kong to HK$15.52.
Headed by billionaire chief executive officer Ivan Glasenberg, the company needs to cut net debt by almost half to US$16 billion by the end of next year to retain its credit rating, which may lead to the sacrifice of 2016 dividends, said JPMorgan Chase & Co analysts. Glencore's net debt was US$29.6 billion as of June 30, according to an Aug 19 filing.
The cost of insuring Glencore's debt with credit default swaps has more than quadrupled over the past year to 445 basis points as of the end of last week, the highest level since January 2012, CMA data show.
The yield premium over the swap rate on Glencore's September 2019 Australian dollar bonds climbed to a record 262 basis points last week, having been issued at a spread of 140 basis points a year ago, and was at 261 on Monday in Sydney, based on Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. pricing.
Glencore said Sept 3 it will buy back US$350 million of 7.5 per cent perpetual notes next month, trimming its debt-servicing costs as the company battles the commodity slump and the slowdown in China. Last month, the company capped 2016 capital investments at US$5 billion, down from an earlier forecast of US$6.6 billion.
Peter Grauer, the chairman of Bloomberg LP, the parent of Bloomberg News, is a senior independent non-executive director at Glencore.
BLOOMBERG

Temasek teams up with Saudi partner in billion dollar bid for fast-food firm: report

Temasek teams up with Saudi partner in billion dollar bid for fast-food firm: report

[LONDON] Singapore's Temasek Holdings has teamed up with Saudi Arabia's Savola Group to bid for Middle Eastern fast-food operator Kuwait Food Co. in a deal that could be valued at between US$4 billion to US$5 billion, according to two people with knowledge of the matter.
Talks between the three companies are ongoing and a deal could be reached before the end of the year, the people said, asking not to be identified as the information is private. JPMorgan Chase & Co is advising Savola, which has a market value of about US$8.5 billion, on the talks, the people said.
Savola had bid on its own to acquire Americana, as Kuwait Food is known, at the end of last year, people with knowledge of the matter said in December. A buyout group including KKR & Co and CVC Capital Partners Ltd. also bid to acquire the Kuwaiti company after it began a sale process in mid-2014, the people also said.
Americana was founded in 1964 and is the franchise operator of restaurants such as KFC, TGI Friday's Inc. and Pizza Hut in the Middle East and North Africa region. It also manufactures produce including California Garden beans and Farm Frites frozen vegetables. The Al-Kharafi family, which has interests in the construction, telecommunications and financial sectors, owns 66.8 percent of Americana, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The company posted net income of US$183 million for the fiscal year ending 2013 on sales of US$3.2 billion. The stock has dropped over the past month, erasing about $1 billion from the company's market value.
Temasek has sought out consumer companies to broaden its investments and benefit from increasing disposable incomes. It completed the HK$44 billion purchase of 25 per cent of Hong Kong-based Hutchison Whampoa Ltd.'s retail arm A.S. Watson & Co during the year through March 31.
Singapore's state-owned investment firm also singled out life sciences and agriculture among the top three industries it is backing. Apart from A.S. Watson, it added assets in US pharmaceutical firm Gilead Sciences Inc and Indian drugmaker Intas Pharmaceuticals Ltd.
Temasek is also in exclusive talks to buy the headquarters of Time Inc's UK unit in a venture with Oxford Properties Group for about 465 million pounds, a person with knowledge of the matter said last month.
Temasek and JPMorgan declined to comment on the bid for Americana, while Savola and Americana didn't immediately respond to calls and e-mails requesting comment.
BLOOMBERG

Gaming outlook in Singapore, Malaysia stable: Fitch

Gaming outlook in Singapore, Malaysia stable: Fitch

THE outlook for the gaming sector in Singapore and Malaysia is stable despite declining visitor arrivals, shrinking VIP business and lower win rates, said rating firm Fitch Ratings.
The rating agency premised its positive prognosis on the robust ebitda (earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation) numbers of over 30 per cent notched up by all three integrated resorts operated by Genting Malaysia in Malaysia and Genting Singapore and Marina Bay Sands in Singapore.
Genting Singapore and Genting Malaysia are in a net cash position, while MBS has been deleveraging. Days receivable continue to be high at over 100 days, as the operators of the two IRs in Singapore extend credit directly to their VIP patrons, said Fitch in a statement.
For Genting Malaysia, a mid-market-focused IR, the days receivable have doubled to 44 days in second quarter 2015 since the first quarter of 2014.
Fitch pointed out that Genting Berhad, the holding company of Genting Singapore and Genting Malaysia, has "substantial" expansion plans in 2015 and 2016 but this was not expected to adversely effect its credit profile as it has proposed to fund the plans through a combination of debt and cash.
"Genting executing its expansion plans while simultaneously maintaining its low leverage and managing its receivables efficiently is key to maintaining its credit profile," said the rating agency.

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