Twitter to offer $1 billion convertible note as shares
rally
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[June 07, 2018]
(Reuters) - Twitter Inc is
preparing a $1 billion convertible note offering, the social media hub
said on Wednesday, one day after news that it would be included in the
S&P 500 index sent its shares up 5 percent to a more than three-year
high.
Convertible bonds grant holders the right to exchange them for equity
above a pre-established price, giving the company scope to reduce coupon
payments on the debt.
The company said on Thursday the private placement of senior unsecured
notes due 2024 was priced at a 0.25 percent coupon.
The offering is expected to result in about $989 million in net proceeds
and settle on June 11, the company said.
There have been 22 convertible offerings by technology companies this
year, raising in total almost $9 billion, according to Thomson Reuters
IFR.
"The stock price has certainly turned around from where it was last
year. ... The momentum in the stock may give investors a reason to at
least look at this deal," said Kim Forrest, senior portfolio manager at
Fort Pitt Capital Group in Pittsburgh.
Twitter is taking advantage of strong investor demand for convertible
bonds, which allow investors a downside-protected way to participate in
the stock. Twitter's stock would need to rise to $77.64 before investors
would be eligible to convert into the underlying stock.
The shares closed at $40.10 on Wednesday.
"We assume the main purpose of the new convert will be to pay off the
old one," wrote Dave King, senior portfolio manager at Columbia
Threadneedle Investments.
Concerns about the prospect of more shares coming onto the market sent
Twitter's stock down about 2 percent in premarket trade before a
recovery that saw it extend Tuesday's rally.
Twitter's 0.25 percent coupon and 42.5 percent conversion premium
compare with the 0.125 percent to 0.625 percent and 40 percent to 45
percent respective marketing ranges, sources told IFR on Wednesday.
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The Twitter application is seen on a phone screen August 3, 2017.
REUTERS/Thomas White/File Photo
That would put it at the higher end of recent conversion premiums. Only three of
the 22 technology companies that issued convertible bonds this year were in that
high range, according to IFR.
This is a popular strategy that other tech companies have used to offset
dilution to very high share prices. For instance, financial payments processor
Square <SQ.N> last month raised $862.5 million on the sale of a five-year
convertible with a conversion premium of 42.5 percent.
Twitter said it will use net proceeds for general corporate purposes and to
purchase call spread options to offset future dilution and to repurchase part of
a convertible that matures in 2019.
That was part of a two-part convertible issue that Twitter sold in September
2014, comprised of five-year and seven-year tranches, according to IFR data.
"The timing of a convertible bond deal with the company’s entrance into the S&P
500 makes sense," said King. "There will likely be a strong bid for the stock
from index funds."
King said this could offset selling pressure from convertible arbitrageurs
trying to establish short positions in Twitter in anticipation of going long on
the new convertible bond.
Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and JP Morgan are expected to price the deal later
on Wednesday, according to IFR.
(Reporting by Kate Duguid and Lewis Krauskopf in New York, Ishita Chigilli Palli
in Bengaluru and Robert Sherwood of IFR; Writing by Alden Bentley; Editing by
Phil Berlowitz and Leslie Adler and Amrutha Gayathri)
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