Euroweek, November 25 2011
KOREAN AIR
Korean Air closed a US$300 million asset-backed deal this week to enliven what has been a quiet period for securitizations from Asia.
Standard Chartered was lead manager and sole arranger on the issue of secured floating rate notes, the first dollar securitization of passenger ticket sales by the airline. Most of the receivables are from KAL’s North America routes. KDB was credit facility provider and swap provider on the deal, a move that clearly helped in this volatile environment, giving investors comfort that they were effectively taking KDB risk.
The transaction matures in October 2014 and offers a floating rate coupon of one month dollar libor plus 200 basis points. Standard Chartered’s global head of structured financing solutions, Warren Lee, called it “very competitive pricing despite the continuing market turmoil.” The receivables have a weighted average life of 1.5 years, and the notes were rated A1(sf) by Moody’s. The notes are listed on the Irish Stock Exchange.
KAL is a reasonably familiar name in the asset-backed markets despite never having issued in dollars before; the transaction is its sixth cross-border ABS deal, and follows five previous deals in yen. Moon Kwon Oh, general manager and head of the financing team at KAL, said it was “meaningful for the company that this transaction is backed by USD denominated assets for the first time.” The deal is understood to have had considerable overlap with the investor base of KDB’s own $1 billion 5.5-year global bond in October.
Observers found two points of significance in the deal. One was that a dollar securitization was taking place at all in such difficult markets, although it was not clear that there was a pipeline of similar deals looking to follow. The other was curiosity about the approach of KDB, whose role as credit facility provider on this deal follows a guarantee on a $350 million bond for Doosan Heavy Infrastructure last week. It will be interesting to see if KDB offers further guarantees and facilities as a means of raising additional fee revenue in the months ahead.
DIM SUM
Issues from Orix, Baosteel and Shougang Corp this week showed that there is still appetite for dim sum bonds, even as world capital markets turn increasingly nasty.
Yesterday Baosteel, the Chinese state-owned steelmaker, raised xxx in a three-tranche issue lead managed by Deutsche Bank and HSBC as joint global coordinators and bookrunners, with China Merchants Securities, DBS, ICBC and Standard Chartered as joint bookrunners.
The deal was significant because it was the first mainland company to issue an offshore RMB bond. Numerous mainland entities have issued offshore, but until now always through an offshore vehicle. A recent change of regulation permitted onshore borrowers to raise funds in this way, and bankers expect to see many more issues from mainland enterprises in this market.
Its success was hearting to investors, with a total book size of xxx. “It was enormously well received,” said someone close to the deal. “There was standing room only at the roadshow lunch in Singapore, 130-odd people in Hong Kong. Baosteel is huge, one of the pre-eminent producers in China, and being owned by SASAC it’s seen as a strategic company.”
The deal was made of three benchmarks. A two-year deal was offered at a range of 3.125% to 3.375%, and priced at x; a three-year bond came with guidance of 3.5% to 3.75% and priced at x; and a five-year tranche was offered at 4.375%-4.625%. Yesterday morning there was talk of a deal as big as RMB6.5 billion, since the company had been given approval to raise up to that amount, but those close to the deal said a more realistic target had been about RMB4 billion.
The bonds, expected to be rated A3/A/A- by Moody’s, S&P and Fitch in line with the borrower rating, carry a change of control clause with a put at 101% if state ownership (through SASAC) falls to 50% or below.
Also yesterday, another steelmaker, Shougang Corp, priced an offshore Reg S reniminbi bond in Hong Kong, raising RMB1 billion in a two-year transaction. This deal priced at 4.875%, in line with guidance, and was lead managed by Bank of China International, Citic Bank International, DBS, ICBC Asia, JP Morgan and Wing Lung Bank. The deal was unrated.
The Baosteel deal followed a RMB500 million three-year issue from Japanese Orix Corp earlier in the week. This was Orix’s second issue in the market, and being a repeat issuer clearly helped the deal get away smoothly, but attracted inevitable comparisons with its outstanding paper: Orix priced at 4%, while outstanding bonds due March 2014 were paying 3.35% – having been launched at just 2%. Joint bookrunners on this deal were ANZ, BNP Paribas, Credit Agricole, Daiwa, Mizuho and Standard Chartered. “Orix were cognisant of the new issue premium payable and it was not a problematic trade of any sort,” said one person close to the deal. “A well known name, repeat issuer; a nice easy one to get away.”
52% of the paper went to Hong Kong, 39% to China/Taiwan and 9% to Singapore. Insurers were the largest group by investor type, taking 49%, followed by private banks (24%), funds (19%) and banks (8%).
HYBRIDS
Australia’s regulator yesterday warned consumers about dangers in hybrid securities, in a move that seemed timed to coincide with the delay of a hybrid issue from Origin Energy.
On Tuesday, Origin began a bookbuild process for a A$500 million hybrid notes issue through ANZ, Commonwealth Bank of Australia, National Australia Bank, Macquarie Bank and UBS. The offer was due to open for retail investors the following day, but instead Origin announced that ASIC had extended the exposure period for the prospectus by seven days – that is, increased the length of time for study of the prospectus before the formal opening of the deal. Origin said: “The extension will allow ASIC to consider further the terms in the prospectus, including aspects relating to the mandatory deferral of interest payments.”Origin said it had received “very strong investor demand” for the notes, and said it and its advisors were “in discussions with ASIC with a view to resolving this matter as soon as practicable.”
Then, just before 6pm Sydney time, yesterday, ASIC put out a statement asking consumers to make sure they understand the conditions and risks of hybrid securities and unsecured notes before investing. “With considerable volatility in equity markets, many investors are looking for alternative investments, including debt and fixed interest securities,” said ASIC. “However, some of these alternatives need close scrutiny before the decision to invest is made.”
The announcement quoted ASIC chairman Greg Medcraft as saying: “In some cases investors are taking on equity-like risks but only receiving bond-like returns. Investors need to understand the conditions of these offers, such as terms and conditions that allow the issuer to exit the deal or suspend interest payments, and long term maturity dates of several decades.” The Origin notes have a 60-year maturity but are callable from 2016, with a 100 basis point step up if they have not been redeemed after 25 years.
Approach by Euroweek, an ASIC spokesman said: “We have no comment about the Origin deal specifically.” But market participants said it was telling that the ASIC warning specifically highlighted deferral of interest payments – saying it “could leave investors temporarily out of pocket” and “the security’s market price may also be damaged by the decision to hold back interest payments” – when that was also explicitly stated as the reason the Origin issue was delayed by the regulator for further study.
ASIC also warned about market price volatility, the subordinated ranking of hybrid securities, early termination rates that apply to the issuer but not the investor, and the increased risk of extremely long timeframes.
The Origin deal was originally intended to close on December 12 for the shareholder and general offers and December 19 for the broker firm offer, with issuance on December 20.
DOLLAR DEALS
The market is watching two Asian issuers to see if they are prepared to brave the treacherous dollar markets next week. Chinese internet company tencent has completed a roadshow in the US, while Reliance Industries is pondering a benchmark deal of its own.
Of the two, tencent is closest to issuing. A roadshow that began in November 15 in Hong Kong before moving to Singapore and London concluded in the US on Wednesday ahead of the Thanksgiving holidays. If market conditions oblige, a Reg S/144a dollar deal should follow next week, although it appears a crushingly difficult market in which to raise a debut bond from a Baa1/BBB+ rated internet services provider with no obvious comparable to price against. Goldman Sachs and Deutsche bank are joint global co-ordinators on the sale, alongside Credit Suisse and HSBC as joint lead managers and bookrunners; those close to the deal describe the mood around the roadshow as “positive”.
Reliance Industries is somewhat further away. Market talk is of a two tranche deal with 10 and 30 year tranches in dollars, but at the time of writing the issuer had still not confirmed the lead managers, nor given the green light to a deal going ahead at all. Mandates were proving characteristically competitive. As one banker put it: “We are standing very close to it, and shouting that we should be on it, and others are doing the same, while the company is playing one off against the other. There are more players being told the deal is theirs to lose than there are seats at the table.”
Another spoke of the issuer “getting commitments from bookrunners on terms that aren’t exactly commercial.” And yesterday afternoon one banker said “it looks like it’s not going anytime soon.”