Exclusive:
Noble Group in talks with banks for $1.5 billion
unsecured loan - sources
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[March 16, 2016]
By Anshuman Daga and Prakash Chakravarti
SINGAPORE/HONG KONG (Reuters) - Noble Group
is in advanced talks to raise a large unsecured loan from banks that
will help repay its debt maturing in May, the loss-making commodity
trader's head of treasury said, a move that could help it win back
investor confidence.
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Noble, whose debt has been downgraded by credit rating agencies and
which has been accused of inappropriate accounting, is seeking to
raise $1.5 billion through a one-year loan that is not backed by
assets, sources with direct knowledge of the situation said. Noble
has denied the accounting claims.
If Noble is able to raise that sum, it would have met most of its
upcoming debt obligations for this year, potentially allaying
investor concerns that its finances are not sufficiently sound
following a $1.2 billion writedown on assets and downgrades by S&P
and Moody's on its debt to junk status.
Wildrik de Blank, Noble's group treasurer, declined to give details
on the size of the loan, which would be structured as a revolving
credit facility. "The revolving credit facility will close ahead of
its May maturity and is expected to exceed our target amount," he
told Reuters in an email.
The Singapore-listed company, one of the world's biggest commodities
traders, is in discussions with a group of banks, including HSBC <HSBA.L>,
Societe Generale <SOGN.PA>, Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ (MUFG)
<8306.T> and JPMorgan <JPM.N> on the new loan, said the sources, who
declined to be identified as the talks are private.
Noble will kick off the roadshows in Hong Kong next week, the
sources said.
Societe Generale, JPMorgan and MUFG declined to comment on the loan,
while there was no immediate response from HSBC.
Noble has around $2.1 billion of debt maturing in May and the
unsecured loan will be used to partially repay that debt. This year,
Noble raised $750 million by selling its stake in an agribusiness
venture.
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The one-year loan comes on top of a $2.5 billion secured financing
that the company is also seeking in the United States from its
lenders, sources had said..
A $2.29 billion loan signed by Noble in May last year included a
$1.15 billion one-year portion that pays an interest margin of 85
basis points over Libor, according to Thomson Reuters LPC.
De Blank said the latest loan would come at a higher price than the
one-year tranche raised by Noble a year ago.
(Additional reporting by Chien Mi Wong of LPC; Editing by Denny
Thomas and Muralikumar Anantharaman)
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