Keeping investors abreast is rewarded

Published May 15, 2015

Share

Kevin Crowley

THE US Federal Reserve is not alone in using forward guidance to manage investors’ expectations.

AngloGold Ashanti has kept investors abreast of each stage of its planned sale of the Cripple Creek & Victor (CC&V) mine in the US and is reaping the rewards in lower bond yields, even before a sale price has been agreed.

The world’s fourth-largest gold producer said on November 3 it planned to sell assets to reduce debt and narrowed this down to a single operation three months later. In March, AngloGold identified CC&V as the mine being sold, and on May 11 said it had received binding bids.

“It’s a sensible strategy,” said Esther Krukowski, a London-based credit analyst at BlueBay Asset Management, which manages $59.1 billion (R707.28bn). “You may think, ‘Gosh, is this a fire-sale?’ but if it has been well-flagged and part of a portfolio review to de-leverage the balance sheet then it makes a lot of sense.”

Bondholders have rewarded the company for its candour. The yield on AngloGold’s $1.25bn of notes due in July 2020 has fallen 59 basis points to 6.35 percent since October 31, the business day before it first announced it was exploring a sale. That compares with a 7 basis-point increase in dollar debt of emerging-market mining companies, JPMorgan Chase indices show.

Marked contrast

AngloGold’s detailed disclosure is in contrast to September last year, when it took investors by surprise by announcing a $2.1bn share sale to pay down debt and split the company in two. Within five days, chief executive Srinivasan Venkatakrishnan scrapped the idea after opposition from investors, including hedge-fund billionaire John Paulson.

“They were upfront about being over-leveraged when they announced the asset split in September,” Olga Budovnits, a credit analyst at Union Bancaire Privee in Zurich, said. “Therefore they have to be transparent about how they solve the problem.”

AngloGold spokesman Stewart Bailey declined to comment on the different levels of disclosure surrounding the two events. Selling CC&V may raise about $800 million, Andrew Byrne, a London-based analyst at Barclays wrote in a May 11 note.

Debt-ebitda

A disposal at that price would cause the company’s ratio of net debt to earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation to fall to 1.3 times, he said. AngloGold’s net debt was 1.97 times adjusted ebitda at March 31, it said on Monday.

The company will use the proceeds from the sale to cut $3bn of net debt, Venkatakrishnan said in an interview this week. “Our debt levels are sticky at about $3bn plus,” he said. “To make a meaningful reduction in the debt relying only on cost reductions is not going to be the answer.”

While he’s keeping his options open on which debt he’ll trim first, the company’s $1.25bn of bonds yielding 8.5 percent “is certainly front and centre of our minds”, he said. –

Bloomberg

Related Topics: