Shares of Ford soared 16% on Monday after the company said it completed tender offers that will reduce its debt by 38% and shave millions of dollars off its interest costs.
The caraker retired about $9,9-billion in securities in exchange for cash and shares under terms of the debt buybacks.
Combined, the moves are expected to reduce the Ford’s interest expenses by more than $500-million this year, as it tries to weather the worst auto sales downturn in 27 years.
The Dearborn, Michigan-based company said it will pay a total of $2,4-billion and issue 468-million shares as a result of the offers.
Shares of Ford rose 52 cents to close at $3,77 on Monday.
About $4,3-billion in Ford’s senior convertible notes were tendered under an offer that expired on Friday. Up to $344-million will be used to pay cash premiums to note holders.
A separate offer to repurchase notes from its financing arm resulted in $3,4-billion in securities being tendered. Ford Motor Credit will use $1,1-billion to purchase that secured term loan debt.
Ford Motor Credit previously said a second cash tender offer that expired on March 23 was ”over-subscribed,” and it doubled the amount of cash it would spend to buy back the debt. That resulted in the use of $1-billion to purchase $2,2-billion in term loan debt.
Its total debt was reduced to about $15,9-billion after the buybacks.
Neil Schloss, Ford’s treasurer, said that the reduction is in line with how much competitors General Motors and Chrysler LLC were asked to cut as a requirement of $17,4-billion in federal loans. Those companies have yet to reach an agreement with their debt holders.
The government’s auto task force has already asked GM and Chrysler to cut their total unsecured debt by two-thirds or more in order to receive additional funds. Ford is not seeking government aid, but its overall debt reduction effort has already amounted to more than two-thirds of its unsecured debt.
”We believe this was a very successful transaction,” Schloss said, adding ”we’re going to watch closely what our competitors are required to do”.
A Standard & Poor’s Equity Research analyst reiterated his ”Hold” on Ford on Monday, in light of the offer results, but said the company still faces a tough sales year.
”In addition to lowered interest costs, the reduction improves Ford’s balance sheet,” said analyst Efraim Levy. ”We still project sizable losses at Ford in 2009, and note that the failure of competitors or key suppliers could further complicate Ford’s situation and cause it ask for the government loans that it is trying to avoid.”
S&P’s Ratings Service, however, lowered its corporate credit rating on Ford to ”SD,” or ”selective default”.
”We consider the completion of the tender offers to be distressed exchanges and, as such, are tantamount to defaults under our criteria,” S&P Ratings credit analyst Gregg Lemos Stein wrote in a report on Monday.
He said S&P would assign a new corporate credit rating on Ford later this month, but does not expect it to be a positive one.
”Even with this debt reduction, our preliminary expectation is that the new corporate credit rating will likely not be higher than the ‘CCC’ category initially because we believe Ford’s fundamental business risks remain unchanged for at least the rest of 2009 and perhaps longer,” he said.
Schloss said no other debt exchanges are planned for Ford and Ford Motor Credit at this time, but the company would ”evaluate that” if GM and Chrysler were forced to cut more debt.
”We don’t have the plans to do it,” Schloss said. ”We’re going to make sure we stay competitive and do it on our time.”
Ford has been the first carmaker to reduce its debt and modify its contract with the United Auto Workers union to cut costs. In addition to eliminating bonuses and cost-of-living increases for workers, Ford also agreed to make up to 50% of payments to a union-run trust for retiree health care benefits in stock instead of cash.
Schloss said the moves give Ford ”a much stronger balance sheet”.
Ford Motor Credit is also participating in the Treasury Department’s Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility, or TALF programme.
The division is offering new bonds that take advantage of the programme, in which investors can obtain TALF funds to purchase the bonds that fund consumer and dealer loans. Ford Motor Credit offered the asset-backed securities in four tranches totaling $2,95-billion last month.
”We were the first ones in on the March deal,” Schloss said. ”We will continue to look at TALF as a great funding deal as it gets more investor support.” – Sapa-AP