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IFRASIA INTERNATIONAL FINANCING REVIEW ASIA JANUARY 11 2020 ISSUE 1121

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China property sector resumes offshore bond rush in busy new year window Bharti Airtel dials up equity, CB buyers to pay fines after shock court ruling Australian bushfires set to stoke demand for green investments PLUS: ANNUAL LEAGUE TABLES

EQUITIES

BONDS

EQUITIES

PEOPLE & MARKETS

Pakistan restarts privatisation push with OGDC, PPL share sales 07

Laos makes surprise debut in dollar bond market with 18month ‘bridge’ 07

China’s secondbiggest IPO in 10 years pays tiny 0.06% fee 08

Asian IB fees edge to record in 2019 as Chinese deals dominate 14


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Upfront Up in smoke

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OPINION INTERNATIONAL FINANCING REVIEW ASIA

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International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

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INTERNATIONAL FINANCING REVIEW ASIA COMPANY INDEX Aboitiz Equity Ventures 49 Activation Group 34 Adira Dinamika Multi Finance 45 Aditya Birla Finance 40 Aeon Credit Service Malaysia 47 Air Water 47 Alibaba Health Information Technology 37 Alipay (Hong Kong) Holding 31 Allahabad Bank 40 Allgreen Properties 50 AMA Group 23 AMVIG Holdings 39 Apeejay Surrendra Park Hotels 43 Australia and New Zealand Banking Group 22 Avation 51 AZRB Capital 48 Bank of Baroda 40 Bank of Ceylon 52 Bank of China 4, 24 Bank of Communications Financial Asset Investment 30 Bank of New Zealand 48 Bank Tabungan Negara 44 Bayan Resources 44 Beijing Energy Holdings 26 Beijing Enterprises Urban Resources Group 34 Beijing-Shanghai High Speed Railway 8 Bharti Airtel 5 Birla Carbon 42 Blackstone Group 22 BNP Paribas 21 Cagamas 47 Caida Securities 36 Cal-Comp Electronics (Thailand) 54 Central Plaza Development 26 Cheng Loong 53 Chengdu Kanghong Pharmaceutical Group 38 China Bohai Bank 30 China Development Bank 25 China Fortune Land Development 4, 26 China Merchants Energy Shipping 34 China Merchants Holdings (Hong Kong) 27 China Merchants Securities 27 China Minsheng Bank 37 China SCE Group Holdings 27 China Yangtze Power 31 China ZhengTong Auto Services Holdings 27 Chow Tai Fook Enterprises 22 CIFI Holdings 27 CitiusTech 43 Commonwealth Bank of Australia 20 Country Garden Holdings 4, 24 CSM Corporatama 45 Dada-JD Daojia 34 Daimler 31 Edelweiss Finance & Investments 42

ESR Cayman 52 Export-Import Bank of India 40 Export-Import Bank of Korea 52 Export-Import Bank of Thailand 54 Fantasia Holdings Group 5, 27 Far East Consortium International 22 Fina Finance & Trading 53 Financial Products Group 46 Flat Glass Group 37 Food Corporation of India 41 Frasers Commercial Trust 50 Frasers Property Thailand 54 FTLife Insurance 38 Fujian Yango Group 27 Future Retail 40 Geely Glory Investment 32 Gloria Material Technology Corp 53 Golden Wheel Tiandi Holdings 27 Gongniu Group 34 Hang Lung Properties 38 Health and Happiness (H&H) International Holdings 38 Hindustan Petroleum 43 Hong Leong Group 48 Hongda Xingye 38 Housing Development Finance Corp 41 Huachen Energy 27 Huijing Holdings 35 Hydoo International Holding 28 Hydra RL BidCo 23 Hy๏ฌ ux 51 Indiabulls Infraestate 41 Indian Railway Finance Corp 41 Industrial Securities (Hong Kong) Financial Holdings 28 Itochu Advance Logistics Investment 46, 47 Japan Display 46 Japan Excellent 47 JD.com 4, 24 Jiangxi Copper 32 Jiangxi Jovo Energy 36 Jiangxiaobai 33 Jiaozuo Investment Group 28 Jinan Shengquan Group Share Holding 36 Jiumaojiu International 35 Joint Stock Commercial Bank for Investment & Development of Vietnam 55 Jollibee 5, 49 Kaisa Group Holdings 5, 28 Kathmandu Holdings 49 Kilcoy Global Foods 24 Kingsoft Cloud 35 KWG Group 28 Lalitpur Power Generation 40 Lao Peopleโ s Democratic Republic 7 Lendlease Group 23 LIC Housing Finance 43 Lizhi 35

Logan Property Holdings 28 Logistar International Holding 54 Longfor Group Holdings 28, 39 Lvji Technology Holdings 34 Manappuram Finance 4, 40, 41 MBK 54 Medco Energi Internasional 44 MicroPort CardioFlow 35 MicroPort Scienti๏ฌ c 35 Mindspace Business Parks REIT 43 Mining Industry Indonesia 45 Mitsui Fudosan Logistics Park 47 Mizuho Financial Group 46 Mr DIY 48 Muthoot Fincorp 41 Muthoot Mini Financiers 42 Nankang Rubber Tire Corp 52 National Australia Bank 20 National Bank For Agriculture and Rural Development 41 National Highways Authority of India 41 New Hope Liuhe 37 New World Development 38 NHPC 41 Nomura Holdings 46 NTPC 42 Oil & Gas Development 7 ONGC Videsh 42 Oriental Energy (Singapore) International Trading 51 Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp 21 Pakistan Petroleum 7 Panda Green Energy Group 26 Parc Eolien de Taza 46 Phoenix Tree 35 Piramal Enterprises 41 Postal Savings Bank of China 35 Power Finance Corp 40, 41 Power Grid Corporation of India 41 PTT Exploration and Production 53 Punjab National Bank 41 Qinghai Salt Lake Industry 31 Radiance Group 29 REC 41 Reliance Retail 43 Republic of Indonesia 44 Republic of the Philippines 8 Route Mobile 44 Royole Corporation 35 Sai Gon Ha Noi Commercial Joint Stock Bank 55 Sealand Securities 36 Seek 23 Shaanxi Beiyuan Chemical Industry Group 36 Shandong Iron & Steel Group 29 Shandong Weigao Group Medical Polymer 37 Shandong Weigao Orthopaedic Device 37 Shanghai Construction Group 37 Shanghai Electric Group 37

Shangrao Investment Holding Group 25 Shanxi Meijin Energy 38 Shengzhou Investment Holdings 29 Shenzhen Expressway 38 Shimao Property 36 Shriram Transport Finance 4, 40 Siamgas and Petrochemicals 54 Sino-Ocean Group 29 Sinopharm Holding (China) Finance Leasing 32 SK Biopharmaceuticals 52 SMC Global Power Holdings 49 Smoore International 36 Star Entertainment Group 22 Starhill Global REIT 50 State Railway of Thailand 54 Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group 46 Sunac China Holdings 29, 33 Suzhou Zelgen Biopharmaceuticals 33 TAC Leasing 33 Tata Steel 42 Thaifoods Group 54 Tianneng Battery Group 36 Tianqi Lithium 36 Tokai Carbon 46 Tom Group 39 Tower Bersama Infrastructure 45 TPI Polene 54 Treasury Corporation of Victoria 22 UCloud Technology 33 Union Bank of the Philippines 49 Unique Engineering and Construction 54 Vinfast Trading and Production 55 Vingroup 55 VPBank Finance 55 Wanda Film Holding 38 Westpac 4, 20 Wing Tai Holdings 50 Wuhan Dangdai Science & Technology Industries (Group) 29 WuXi Biologics (Cayman) 34 XacBank 48 Xiamen Bank 31 Xinnneng (Hong Kong) Energy Investment 32 Xinyi Solar 36 Yango Group 29 Yuzhou Properties 4, 30 Zhejiang Provincial New Energy Investment Group 36 Zhengzhou Urban Construction Investment Group 30 Zhenro Properties 30 Zhenro Services Group 37 Zhongguancun Development Group 30 Zhongrui Industrial Group 30

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International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020


Contents COVER STORIES

INTERNATIONAL FINANCING REVIEW ASIA JANUARY 11 2020 ISSUE 1121

COUNTRY REPORT

BONDS

04 China developers lead bond rush The Asian bond markets exploded into life last week with a US$24.1bn rush of new issues, as more than 30 borrowers capitalised on strong market sentiment.

20 AUSTRALIA

48 NEW ZEALAND

National Australia Bank kicked off its 2020 issuance programme with a tightly priced US$1.75bn two-part senior unsecured short three-year note.

Bank of New Zealand priced a SFr300m 0.111% 8.5-year bond at the tight end of mid-swaps plus 37bp–40bp guidance for a zero new issue concession.

24 CHINA

49 PHILIPPINES

E-commerce company JD.com has raised US$1bn from dualtranche SEC-registered bonds. A US$700m 3.375% 10-year tranche priced inside guidance.

Philippines-based electric power distributor SMC Global Power Holdings is arranging investor meetings.

EQUITIES/STRUCTURED EQUITY

05 Bharti taps market to pay fines Bharti Airtel returned to the capital markets for a further US$3bn from a share sale and convertible bond, raising funds to help pay a massive penalty.

50 SINGAPORE

BONDS

06 Australia seeks greener future

38 HONG KONG

The devastating bushfires in Australia are an acute reminder, if one was needed, of the need for additional investment to tackle climate change.

NEWS

40 INDIA

07 Pakistan restarts privatisations Pakistan plans to resume sales of shares in stateowned companies after a five-year hiatus, hoping recent economic and capital market reforms will prove a draw. 07 Laos makes surprise debut Laos has printed a US dollar debt issue in a club deal to tide it over before it targets a wider group of investors. 08 Tiny fee for big China IPO Beijing-Shanghai High Speed Railway is paying a sponsor and underwriting fee of just 0.06% on its IPO. 08 Philippine tender baffles market Applied Alpha LP surprised many with an offer on long-dated Philippine sovereign bonds well below market price.

PEOPLE & MARKETS Asian investment banking fees climbed to a record high in 2019 after a blowout year in credit and a strong end to the year in equities. 15 China suspends London Stock Connect scheme China has temporarily blocked planned cross-border listings between the two stock exchanges. 16 Singapore gets 21 digital banking bids Singapore has drawn huge interest from tech companies looking to shake up the banking landscape. 14 Who’s moving where Bi Mingjian, chief executive officer of China International Capital Corporation, has resigned. 16 In brief Fugitive Malaysian financier Jho Low has said he only acted as an intermediary for deals involving 1MDB.

56 This week’s figures

Manappuram Finance last Monday sold US$300m of three-year bonds priced at par to yield 5.9%, inside initial guidance of 6.25% area. 44 INDONESIA

Bank Tabungan Negara has hired banks for a proposed offering of US dollardenominated subordinated Basel III-compliant Tier 2 capital securities. 46 JAPAN

14 Asian IB fees climb to record high

ASIA DATA

Property developer and investor New World Development on December 24 sold HK$1.5bn 30-year senior unsecured bonds to FTLife Insurance.

Nomura Holdings priced US$3bn of five and 10-year SEC-registered bonds at Treasuries plus 100bp and 125bp, respectively. 47 MALAYSIA

National mortgage agency Cagamas has printed M$1.2bn of conventional and Islamic commercial and MTN notes.

Singapore-listed Starhill Global REIT has set up a S$2bn multi-currency debt issuance programme. 52 SOUTH KOREA

Export-Import Bank of Korea has sold €150m of five-year notes in a private placement. The Reg S bond priced with a fixed coupon of 0.137%. 52 SRI LANKA

State-owned Bank of Ceylon has raised US$130m from a one-year loan with four banks participating, marking its return to the offshore loan markets after less than two years. 52 TAIWAN

Units of Taiwan-listed Nankang Rubber Tire Corp have raised a NT$30bn five-year loan for land development purposes. 53 THAILAND

PTT Exploration and Production, rated Baa1/BBB+/BBB+, returned to the US dollar market after less than two months with a US$350m 10-year 144A/Reg S bond. 55 VIETNAM

48 MONGOLIA

XacBank has agreed a US$100m five-year syndicated loan, strengthening the bank’s longterm funding base and allowing it to further expand.

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

Sai Gon Ha Noi Commercial Joint Stock Bank has mandated Citigroup and HSBC as joint global coordinators and joint bookrunners for a proposed Reg S offering of US dollar bonds.

3


News

Australia’s bushfires 06

Privatisations in Pakistan 07

Laos dollar debut 07

China developers lead bond rush Bonds G3 issuance gets off to roaring start across Asia Pacific BY CAROL CHAN, JIHYE HWANG

raising US$4bn and taking in US$2.5bnequivalent in a dual-currency deal, but Indian non-bank lenders MANAPPURAM FINANCE and

WESTPAC

BANK OF CHINA

The Asian bond markets exploded into life last week with a US$24.1bn rush of new issues, as more than 30 borrowers capitalised on strong market sentiment and ample liquidity at the start of the new year. Issuers from India to Indonesia and the Philippines to Australia enjoyed an enthusiastic response from investors, with final pricing coming well inside guidance on all new issues. “The liquidity generally exists across the board,” said a syndicate banker who was involved in several deals last week. “Fund flows to emerging markets-type investors are looking strong.” Excluding Japanese deals, 31 Asian issuers sold bonds in G3 currencies last week. The biggest deals came from financial institutions, with

4

followed by COUNTRY GARDEN’s US$1bn two-tranche bond and a US$645m 2026 from YUZHOU PROPERTIES. The rush to print at the

“Developers are keen to grab the short window ahead of the Chinese New Year to secure part of their funding needs this year, as sentiment in the Asian credit market remains constructive despite rising geopolitical concerns around a Middle East conflict.” also made their mark. Chinese online retailer JD.COM also came out with a US$1bn dual-trancher. More than half of the new issues so far this year have come from the Chinese property sector. A total of 18 real estate companies sold bonds totalling US$8.4bn, with CHINA FORTUNE LAND DEVELOPMENT raising the most with a US$1.2bn dual-trancher, SHRIRAM TRANSPORT

very start of the year comes as property developers race to stay ahead of the game while the market is in good shape. “Developers are keen to grab the short window ahead of the Chinese New Year to secure part of their funding needs this year, as sentiment in the Asian credit market remains constructive despite rising geopolitical concerns around a Middle East conflict,” said Li

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

Chao, head of global markets at China Citic Bank International. TIGHT PRICING Last week’s new issues from the Chinese property sector attracted huge order books and priced, on average, around 40bp tighter than initial guidance. “It is quite substantial as US dollar deals normally price around 25bp inside initial guidance,” said another banker who was involved in several of the deals. “Anything beyond 30bp is definitely a signal of a strong market.” YUZHOU PROPERTIES, for example, tightened by as much as 62bp after receiving orders of over US$4.1bn. “The pricing seems quite tight but most of them have performed well in the secondary market, especially the high quality names such as Country Garden, which has


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Large IPO, tiny fee 08

a credit upside theme,” said a Hong Kong-based investor from a Chinese brokerage. Country Garden is rated Ba1/BB+ by Moody’s/S&P but has a BBB– rating from Fitch. The investor added that even new issues from Single B rated names like KAISA GROUP HOLDINGS and FANTASIA HOLDINGS GROUP had traded up more than a point against the risk-on backdrop. “Tightening is not abnormal because the margin is still juicy especially for the Single B rated names, while companies are always in need of funding – it’s like early last year,” said a third DCM banker. Fantasia priced a US$450m 10.875% three-year non-call two bond at 99.191 to yield 11.2%, inside initial guidance of 11.625% area. Kaisa priced a US$500m five-year non-call three at par to yield 10.5%, more than 37bp inside initial guidance. The glut of offerings comes after supply from the Chinese property sector had cooled in the second half of last year after regulation changes. Li said dollar bond funding costs were likely to trend lower for Chinese developers this year as supply from the market should moderate going forward due to the new rules. The National Development and Reform Commission in July said developers would only be allowed to issue offshore bonds to refinance medium or long-term offshore borrowings due to mature within a year, effectively blocking debut issuers and those reliant on short-dated bonds. This week is set to be busy again with more than a dozen mandates announced, including unusual deals such as a perpetual bond for Philippine fast-food retailer JOLLIBEE. High-grade names from China are also said to be lining up to print new paper after the Lunar New Year break, but only if geopolitical risks remain contained.

Philippine mystery 08

India’s Operation Twist 09

Bharti taps market to pay fines Equities/Structured Equity Telco issues equity, CB after contentious court ruling BY S ANURADHA

returned to the capital markets last week for a further US$3bn from a share sale and convertible bond, raising funds to help pay a massive penalty following a contentious court ruling in October.

BHARTI AIRTEL

family own 27% of the company and Singapore Telecommunications 35%. The sector has been shaken by the 2016 launch of Reliance Jio, funded by India’s biggest company, Reliance Industries. A Supreme Court judgment last year dealt a further blow to incumbents

“The success of the deals show that Bharti Airtel is better prepared to weather the storm in India’s terrifying telecom sector. It’s effectively a two-horse race [Bharti Airtel and Reliance Jio] in India’s telecom sector and investors are putting their money on the management’s credibility.”

The company’s Rs144bn (US$2bn) qualified institutional placement ranks among India’s biggest overnight share sales, coming within a whisker of State Bank of India’s Rs150bn QIP in 2017. Bharti’s upsized US$1bn convertible bond is also the first CB from India since 2016 and matches Reliance Communications’ US$1bn record in 2007. Despite the jumbo size, and coming soon after a Rs250bn rights issue last May, both portions were easily absorbed as investors took the view that Bharti has put the worst behind it. “The success of the deals show that Bharti Airtel is better prepared to weather the storm in India’s terrifying telecom sector,” a Mumbaibased analyst said. “It’s effectively a two-horse race [Bharti Airtel and Reliance Jio] in India’s telecom sector and investors are putting their money on the management’s credibility.” Sunil Mittal and his

Bharti Airtel and Vodafone Idea, which are required to pay around Rs920bn in total to the department of telecommunications in overdue fees and penalties by February. Both companies have sought a limited review of the order from the Supreme Court. Bharti said it would use the proceeds to meet any necessary payments in the case. If it manages to overturn the ruling, the funds will help strengthen its balance sheet, replenishing a war chest for the ongoing battle with Jio. IMPROVEMENTS SEEN Although Bharti Airtel is not expected to return to profit anytime soon, after reporting a net loss of Rs230bn in the three months to September 30, the operating conditions are expected to improve as rival Reliance Jio is slowly increasing tariffs, indicating that it not willing to burn cash endlessly to gain market share, an ECM banker close to the transaction said. Bharti Airtel also managed

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

to bring down its net debt to Rs881bn in the September quarter compared to Rs1.18trn in the same period a year earlier, thanks to last year’s rights offer and the listing of its African subsidiary. The company also plans to monetise its optic fibre network, but has yet to reveal details of its approach. The share price has risen around 50% over the past year, in a sign that investors take an optimistic view. The shares currently trade at a 2022 EV/Ebitda multiple of 8 compared with 5x-6x for regional players. The QIP price of Rs445 came at a 3% discount to the pre-deal close of Rs458.85 but above the indicative price of Rs435. Bharti Airtel shares were in the green after the share sale having closed up 0.3% higher at Rs460.10 last Thursday. The CB was also up at 103 versus the issue price of 100. The 2025 1.5% five-year CB was priced at an annual yield to maturity of 2%. The initial conversion premium has been fixed at the bottom of the 20%–25% range. There is no investor put option. The CB comprised a base deal of US$750m with an upsize option of US$250m. Around 150 accounts participated in the QIP and 100 in the CB. Long-only institutions bought 80% of the QIP. Axis, Citigroup, JP Morgan were global coordinators on the QIP and bookrunners with BNP Paribas, BofA Securities, Goldman Sachs, HDFC Securities and HSBC. BNP Paribas, Barclays, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan were bookrunners on the CB. DBS was the cobookrunner. 5


News

Australia seeks greener future Bonds Bushfires set to increase awareness of climate-aligned investments BY JOHN WEAVERS

The devastating bushfires in Australia are an acute reminder, if one was needed, of the need for additional investment to tackle climate change. Australia has been battling wildfires on an unprecedented scale for months, due to aboveaverage temperatures and a prolonged drought that has turned the lush countryside in the country’s South-East into dry tinder. The weather bureau said last week 2019 had been the hottest and driest year on record and warned of more high temperatures to come in the next few months. Local bankers and investors expect the wildfires to drive further demand for green assets as more savers witness the impact of climate change firsthand. One Sydney-based fund manager expects more capital to be allocated to renewable energy in particular. “This is primarily a development in the equity space, which is the first port of call to put green money to work, especially among grassroots retail investors who are on the lookout for more responsible opportunities,” he said. “In the fixed-income market the obvious impact of global warming will push us further along the road to higher ESG [environmental, social and governance] bond issuance and the possibility that these instruments consistently price inside standard bonds.” Responsible investments under management are already growing fast in Australia, including a 13% increase in 2018 to A$980bn (US$673bn) for a 44% share of the A$2.24trn total assets professionally managed in the country. Another substantial rise is assured when the next annual Responsible Investment Benchmark Report Australia 6

is released later this year, even before further growth in response to the catastrophic bushfires. RETAIL DEMAND Much of the rapid expansion comes from retail investors, who represent a large chunk of Australia’s giant buyside base and are becoming increasingly focused on environmental issues. Self-managed superannuation funds (SMSFs) made up around one-third of Australia’s nearUS$1.9trn national pension pot in 2018, the world’s fourth largest, according to the Towers Watson Global Pension Assets Study. Australian pension assets rose 10.2% per annum between 1998 and 2018, almost double the 5.3% average of the 22 major pension markets covered by Towers Watson, thanks largely to governmentmandated superannuation payments, currently set at 9.5% of personal income. After a slow start by international standards, soaring demand has underpinned a impressive expansion in

ESG bond and securitisation issuance. Overall supply reached around A$12bn last year, well above the previous annual record of A$8.4bn in 2018 and a huge pick-up from A$5.2bn in 2017 and just A$1.1bn in 2016. Continued investment in renewable energy is also likely to drive issuance. Australia’s Liberal government is facing demands to accelerate the shift to clean energy amid criticism of its defence of the coal industry, which accounts for the majority of Australian electricity generation and is its most important export. Australia has pledged to reduce emissions by 26%-28% from 2005 to 2030. RELATIVE VALUE Thus far Australian dollar ESG bohave tended to print in line with issuers’ standard notes but to perform more steadily in the secondary market thanks to their higher allocations to buyand-hold investors. There are signs that tighter pricing may become more

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

commonplace, however. New South Wales Treasury Corp’s A$1.8bn long fiveyear sustainability bond last November – equalling the biggest deal so far in the ESG sector – priced flat to or slightly inside its secondary curve. In New Zealand, Auckland Council became the first domestic green bond issuer in June 2018 with a NZ$200m five-year, before selling a NZ$150m six-year note in July 2019, both of which printed 2bp inside the municipality’s standard curve. In addition to industry and company screenings, Sweden’s Riksbank last year established a broader interpretation of “good” and “bad” assets by boycotting bonds from Australia’s two major coalproducing states, Western Australia and Queensland. The Swedish central bank sold its bonds issued by these states, along with its exposure to Canada’s Alberta province, to give greater consideration to sustainability issues in the way it invests the country’s foreign exchange reserves.


For daily news stories visit www.ifre.com

Pakistan restarts privatisations Equities Government to sell stakes in OGDC and Pakistan Petroleum BY S ANURADHA

Pakistan plans to resume sales of shares in state-owned companies after a five-year hiatus, with the hope that recent economic and capital market reforms will prove a draw for investors. The country’s Privatisation Commission is set to hire banks to manage share sales totalling Rs83bn (US$535m) in PAKISTAN PETROLEUM and OIL & GAS DEVELOPMENT this month. Both selldowns are likely to take place in the first half and will be the first sales of state-owned shares since 2015 when the state sold its residual 41.5% stake in Habib Bank for Rs102bn. Since then, the privatisation programme was dogged by political and economic uncertainty. The country’s inclusion into the MSCI Emerging Market Index in June 2017 did not help much in attracting foreign investors

because of an extremely low weighting of 0.15% initially, which has now fallen to 0.03%. In contrast Pakistan enjoyed a 63% weighting in the MSCI Frontier Markets Asia Index and around 9% weighting in the MSCI Frontier Market Index in December 2016. “Frontier market investors allocated a large portion of their funds to Pakistan but we have disappeared in the emerging markets universe. It will be a relief if we are downgraded,” a Karachi-based ECM banker said. IMPROVING FUNDAMENTALS Some market participants, though, have not given up hope. Ruchir Desai, fund manager at Asia Frontier Capital, said investors are likely to view Pakistan favourably as the country has started work on reforms after a much-needed IMF loan programme that began in the second half of 2019.

“The economic story is improving and foreign investors will possibly look at Pakistan more actively now,” Desai said. The current account deficit has fallen to around 1.5% of GDP in the first five months of the fiscal year that ends on June 30 2020 versus 6% in 2019. The improvement follows a 40% depreciation of the rupee against the US dollar since the start of 2018. With interest rates set to fall from the second half of the year, market sentiment will pick up, according to Desai. More importantly, Desai says valuations are very attractive compared to other frontier markets. Pakistan trades at a 2020 P/E multiple of seven while Vietnam trades at 15.8, Sri Lanka at 11.1 and Bangladesh at 9.8. This is despite a 44% rise in the benchmark KSE 100 index from its 52-week low of 28,674 touched on August 16 2019.

Laos makes surprise debut Bonds Asian sovereign sells short-dated dollar bond to restore FX reserves BY DANIEL STANTON

The LAO PEOPLE’S DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC has printed a US dollar debt issue in a club deal to tide it over before it targets a wider group of investors. Laos sold a US$150m 18month bond in mid-December to a small group of investors, according to multiple sources. The bond pays a coupon of 6.875% and was priced at 97.75589 to yield 8.5%. Oppenheimer was sole bookrunner. The sovereign does not have international credit ratings, but investors in the deal were told it was expecting ratings of B3 and B– from Moody’s and S&P, respectively. Laos has a rating of BBB with a stable outlook from Thailand’s Tris Rating. Tris in

June downgraded the sovereign’s rating from BBB+, citing deteriorating foreign exchange reserves, but the dollar bond issue should help. By way of comparison, Pakistan has a US dollar sukuk due October 2021 and rated B3/B– (Moody’s/Fitch) that was bid in mid-December at a yield of 4.3%, according to Tradeweb. Mongolia, which has ratings of B3/B/B, has a US dollar bond due April 2021 which was bid at 3.6%. Papua New Guinea was the last sovereign in Asia Pacific to debut in the US dollar bond market. Its US$500m bond due 2028, sold in November 2018, was bid around 7.5% at the time of the Laos issue. Laos’s issue came after many fund managers had already closed their books for the year, or were unwilling to take the

risk of buying an unrated bond from a first-time issuer. “The short tenor, the small amount and the circumstances of the new issue led to a higher, more attractive yield in the pricing,” said Alexander Zeeh, CEO of S.E.A. Asset Management, which manages an Asian highyield bond fund and subscribed to the deal. “The issue went largely unnoticed and really wasn’t on people’s radar. I expect the yield to tighten significantly in the months ahead.” Laos held a roadshow in Hong Kong ahead of the transaction and a teleconference for Singaporean investors, but the sub-benchmark size and short tenor meant that some fund managers were not interested or not able to participate. “This is more like a bridging loan than a bond,” said another

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

In addition, Pakistan last week also eased rules for loss-making companies and greenfield projects to access the capital markets. (See People and Markets.) Still the PP and OGDC sales may not be blowout deals given that both of them are from the defensive energy sector. “Stocks in the automobile and cement sectors look attractive as they have corrected significantly over the past two years making valuations very attractive with a 2-3 year investment horizon,” Desai said. Two groups comprising local and international arrangers are vying for the PP and OGDC mandates. A consortium of Credit Suisse, Arif Habib and AKD Securities is competing for the PP mandate against CLSA and Alfalah Securities, while the OGDC job is contested by CS/Arif/AKD and Citigroup, HBL and Next Capital. The government plans to sell a 10% stake in PP, worth up to Rs38bn at current prices. Around 7% of OGDC, currently valued at Rs45bn, will be sold. The government owns 67.5% of PP and 74.97% of OGDC.

buyside source. “I think they are working on something else.” The country’s gross international reserves declined 14% to US$873m, or 1.2 months of imports, in 2018 and were projected to recover to just above US$1bn last year, according to the International Monetary Fund. Laos previously sold US$182m of dollar bonds in two tranches in December 2015 to institutional investors in Thailand and regularly issues sovereign bonds denominated in Thai baht, but recently hired banks to arrange its first deal to be widely marketed to international investors. Credit Suisse, JP Morgan and Standard Chartered are understood to be working on the proposed US dollar bond offering. A banker said he did not expect the yield of the private deal to push pricing higher in the proposed dollar offering, but said the December transaction had come as a surprise. 7


News

Tiny fee for big China IPO Equities High-speed rail company benefits from competition among banks BY KAREN TIAN, FIONA LAU BEIJING-SHANGHAI HIGH SPEED RAILWAY is paying a sponsor and underwriting fee of just 0.06% on China’s second-largest IPO in 10 years, in a stark example of the intense competition for high-profile deals in the country’s growing equity market. The state-owned company last Wednesday wrapped up its Shanghai IPO to raise Rmb30.7bn (US$4.4bn), just shy of the Rmb32.7bn Shanghai IPO of Postal Savings Bank of China in December. PSBC’s A-share listing is China’s biggest float

since Agricultural Bank of China raised Rmb68.5bn from the Shanghai portion of its A and H-share IPO in 2010. The sponsor and underwriting fee comes to just US$2.6m, split between three underwriters, which bankers close to the IPO put down to the keen competition among banks. “Large state-owned enterprises such as BeijingShanghai High Speed Railway have strong pricing power on the fee, and the fee is one of the key components when they consider an IPO mandate,” said one of the bankers close to the deal.

“The giant deal can help boost league table rankings and add to the credentials of the bank, which in turn can help the bank win more business in future.” A second banker said it was meaningless to talk about underwriting fees alone. “Deals like Beijing-Shanghai High Speed Railway will never fail to pass the IPO hearing or win final approval. No matter how much the issuers pay as the sponsor fee, there is always someone waiting to provide the service.” The IPO fee is paltry by both local and international standards. PSBC paid a sponsor and underwriting fee of

Philippine tender baffles market Bonds US firm offers to buy dollar bonds below current market price BY DANIEL STANTON

A little-known investment firm in New York has surprised the credit market by offering to buy long-dated Philippine sovereign bonds well below the market price. Applied Alpha LP has proposed to buy up to US$410m in principal amount of the REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES’ longdated US dollar bonds, namely its 9.5% senior notes due 2030, 3.95% bonds due 2040, 3.7% bonds due 2041 and 3.7% bonds due 2042. Neither the offeror nor tender agent Idexis wanted to discuss specific details of the offer, but a banker said the tender price was about five points below where the bonds were trading in the secondary market. The tender prices drop in the last 10 business days of the offer to encourage bondholders to submit early. When the tender offer opened on December 5 the 2030, 2040, 2041 and 2042 bonds were bid at high cash prices of 159, 114, 113 and 8

113, respectively, according to Tradeweb, and the offer prices for all four were above face value. “The offer is meant to accommodate those holders who have little access to liquidity and whose ability to receive a cash payment would be seriously impaired by fees and expenses imposed on them by intermediaries,” said Applied Alpha in an email when asked about the tender. “We understand that there exist many holders with small, oddlot position which would like to take advantage of such an offer at a significant premium to par.” Even accounting for intermediary fees, it is likely holders would achieve a higher price by selling in the open market. If bondholders tendered US$410m of paper at a five-point discount, they would face mark-to-market losses, while Applied Alpha would be able to sell the bonds in the market for a quick US$20m profit. “It didn’t make any sense,”

said a fund manager who saw the offer. “We were all just speculating it was a US legal manoeuvre to prove there are no bonds at some specific price.” The offer expired on January 8, which was unusual timing, given that so many fund managers are away during the Christmas and New Year period and are unlikely to be willing to start the new year with an avoidable mark-to-market loss. The final result of the tender was not known. A company called Applied Alpha LP was incorporated in September 2018 and is registered at 4th Avenue in Brooklyn, according to New York Department of State filings. Google Maps data and property website listings show the registered address is a onebedroom apartment behind a taco restaurant on the ground floor of a four-storey building. In an email response, Applied Alpha said it was not based at that address, but in Manhattan. It did not say where exactly, and the website associated with

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

Rmb463m, or about 1.4% of the IPO size. In Hong Kong, Budweiser Brewing Company APAC paid underwriting fees and discretionary incentives totalling up to 1.5% for its HK$45bn (US$5.74bn) IPO in September. China Securities, the sponsor of the Beijing-Shanghai High Speed Rail deal, is expected to take the biggest slice of the fee, while bookrunners CICC and Citic Securities will share the rest. POLICY-MOTIVATED IPO The company sold 6.29bn A-shares or 12.8% of the enlarged capital at Rmb4.88 each, less than the proposed

its email address is blank. Applied Alpha is understood to have conducted similar transactions before in other markets. Picking these bonds for a tender offer struck some market watchers as a strange choice, as the Philippines makes the most effort of any Asian sovereign to keep its curve liquid. The Philippines frequently undertakes switch tender offers to allow bondholders to swap its less liquid dollar or peso bonds for new paper. For instance, in 2017 it sold US dollar 25-year bonds and invited holders of 14 of its outstanding bonds to switch into the new issue, having carried out a similar exercise in 2015. That led some to speculate that the offeror was trying to buy up bonds in the hope that the sovereign would announce another tender offer. These frequent opportunities to switch to newer bonds, combined with the low offer price, made it hard to see why anyone would want to sell their bonds in the tender. “The only people who are going to sell at that price are people who do it by accident,” said the banker.


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15% of the enlarged capital mentioned in the preliminary prospectus. The high-speed rail operator allotted 48.9% of the IPO to strategic investors, and split the remaining shares 70.6%/29.4% between institutional and retail investors. As the retail part was oversubscribed 315 times, the company clawed back 1.5bn shares from the institutional part to the retail tranche. Strategic investors will face lock-ups of 12 months, and institutional buyers will be barred from selling 70% of their allocation for six months. The issuer itself is profitable, but plans to use the proceeds from the listing to acquire a majority stake in a loss-making bullet-train railway from the

Shanghai bureau of China State Railway Group and two other shareholders. It will spend Rmb50bn to purchase a 65.1% stake in Jingfu

“Deals like BeijingShanghai High Speed Railway will never fail to pass the IPO hearing or win final approval. No matter how much the issuers pay as the sponsor fee, there is always someone waiting to provide the service.” Railway Passenger Dedicated Line Anhui, which manages 45 train stations on four dedicated

railway lines between seven cities mainly in Anhui and Henan provinces. It posted a net loss of Rmb884m in the first nine months of 2019 on revenue of Rmb1.37bn, against a loss of Rmb1.2bn on revenue of Rmb1.77bn in full-year 2018. The rest of the acquisition cost will be covered through internal funding. The issuer says in the IPO filing that it plans to expand and optimise the bullet train network under its management. It took just 18 days for BeijingShanghai High Speed Railway to pass its IPO hearing after it filed its proposal on October 25, and people close to the deal told IFR the rapid review was policy-motivated. This was despite the regulator having questions about the business,

RBI twist reopens rupee market Bonds State-owned issuers raise funds after central bank lowers long-term yields BY KRISHNA MERCHANT

Indian public sector companies are rushing to issue onshore bonds after three successive central bank operations pushed down yields at the long end of the curve. India’s central bank has bought back Rs300bn (US$4.2bn) of long-term bonds since midDecember in an unprecedented series of special open market operations, similar to ‘Operation Twist’ in the US in 2011. The Reserve Bank of India’s intervention is effectively a debt-to-money market swap, in which the RBI sucks out longduration government bonds and pumps in short-duration paper to flatten the yield curve. Since mid-December, Food Corporation of India, REC, National Highways Authority of India, Indian Railway Finance Corp, National Bank For Agriculture and Rural Development, NHPC, and Power Finance Corp have raised a total of Rs199bn from 10-year to 30year domestic bonds. State-owned banks including

Bank of Baroda, Allahabad Bank and Punjab National have printed a total of Rs39.2bn from 10-year Basel III-compliant Tier 2 bonds during the same period. On January 6, the RBI

will help all borrowers, but are especially welcome for state-owned companies that need to meet their borrowing requirements in the current fiscal year.

“Mark-to-market valuations of long-term bond portfolios will increase, this will improve the balance sheet of banks, debt mutual fund schemes and other financial sector investors.” purchased Rs100bn of five to 10-year government bonds and sold the same amount of short-term bonds maturing in 2020. RBI conducted a similar operation on December 30 and December 23, each time buying Rs100bn of 10-year bonds and selling the same amount of 2020 debt. The moves have helped reverse a 30bp spike in India’s 10-year government benchmark in early December, after the central bank unexpectedly left its key repo rate unchanged on December 6 even as it slashed its forecast for economic growth to its lowest in over a decade. Lower long-term yields

The 10-year benchmark yield for Triple A rated public sector borrowers has fallen 24bp from a near six-month high of 7.79% on December 13, and the spread between the two-year and 10year PSU benchmarks narrowed 25bp since mid-December. Before Operation Twist, the term spreads (the difference between the 10-year yield and one-year Treasury bills) was the highest since 2010. “Owing to rising term spreads, the fall in government bond yields hasn’t kept pace with falling nominal GDP growth rates,” said Suyash Choudhary, head of fixed income at IDFC AMC, in a note last month. This

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

including the fact that it employs only 67 people, leading it to ask whether it is “an asset management company and not a railway transportation service company”. Beijing-Shanghai High Speed Railway has also unveiled financial data for the first time. It earned a net profit of Rmb9.5bn on revenue of Rmb25bn in the first nine months of 2019, compared to a net profit of Rmb10.2bn on revenue of Rmb31.2bn in fullyear 2018. China Railway Construction Investment Company, a unit of China Railway Group, held a 49.76% stake in the bullet-train company before the IPO, and will remain the biggest shareholder in the company with a 43.39% stake after the deal.

made the effective borrowing rate very high even for the sovereign, let alone the private corporate sector. The RBI operations will help spur lending as the cost of longterm financing for setting up new projects becomes attractive. “Mark-to-market valuations of long-term bond portfolios will increase, this will improve the balance sheet of banks, debt mutual fund schemes and other financial sector investors,” said debt capital markets consultancy Mavuca in a note on January 3. However, market participants expect a limited impact on private sector issuance, given the slowdown in the economy and ongoing liquidity problems in the non-banking sector. Mavuca said interest rate twists may not be enough to convince private sector companies to set up new projects. “Most companies in the private sector are concerned about servicing their current debt amid weakening consumption expenditure and low capacity utilisation. Even mega-sized business groups have announced plans to go debt-free in a few years,” the consultancy said. 9


League tables

Asia G3 enjoys record year Bonds League Tables High-grade issuers test longer tenors, as high yield booms BY DANIEL STANTON

Asian G3 bond issuance enjoyed a record year in 2019, as the US Federal Reserve changed course and began cutting rates again, sending dollar yields lower and creating supportive market conditions for issuers. Total G3 bond sales from Asia, excluding Australia and Japan reached US$349.2bn in 2019, up 22% from 2018 and beating the previous high of US$334.1bn in 2017, according to Refinitiv data. Including Australia, the total reached US$395.5bn, just shy of 2017’s US$413bn record. HSBC extended its lead as the top underwriter in 2019, while Credit Suisse and Standard Chartered were the biggest gainers by market share. Tencent Holdings’ US$6bn five-tranche bond offering in April was the year’s biggest deal from an Asian issuer, and the success of the US$500m 30-year tranche paved the way for other high-grade issuers to push out to longer tenors. The likes of Indonesia’s PLN and Pertamina joined the sovereign in selling 30-year bonds, as did energy companies Sinopec, CNOOC and Thai Oil.

FEWER BANK PERPS One area that saw less supply was perpetual bank capital:

Chinese banks had been expected to drive volumes, as call dates on their old Additional Tier 1 notes neared, but onshore financing proved more attractive. Korea’s Kookmin Bank and Woori Bank came to market alongside some mid-sized banks from Greater China to sell AT1 bonds, but it was Thai banks that benefited most from this unexpected lull in bank capital issuance. TMB Bank sold the country’s first Basel III Additional Tier 1 bonds in November, following strong responses to US dollar Tier 2 issues from Bangkok Bank and Kasikornbank. In September the two sold 15-year non-call 10 and 12-year non-call seven bonds, respectively, which were longer tenors than usual for the Asian Tier 2 market. Chinese property companies drove the high-yield market to a record volume of US$70.7bn, eclipsing the 2017 total of US$48.8bn. Deal sizes were smaller and issuers came to market more frequently than usual, to take advantage of good issuance windows and avoid overwhelming investors. Zhenro Properties came

Top bookrunners of

Top bookrunners of

Top bookrunners of Asian fixed and

Top bookrunners of Asian fixed and

all Asian currencies

all Asian currencies

floating-rate bonds for G3 currencies

floating-rate bonds for G3 currencies

(excluding Japan and Australia)

(excluding Japan, Australia and China)

ex-Japan, inc-Australia

ex-Japan and Australia

(inc-certificates of deposit) 1/1/19 – 31/12/19

(inc-certificates of deposit) 1/1/19 – 31/12/19

(inc-Samurais and Yankees) 1/1/19 – 31/12/19 Amount

(inc-Samurais and Yankees) 1/1/19 – 31/12/19 Amount

In November, Thailand’s PTT Exploration and Production pushed out to 40 years with a US$650m deal priced at a slim spread of Treasuries plus 172.5bp. Perpetual bonds also regained popularity with investors thanks to the low rates environment, with China Huadian in May selling the first perp of the year from a Chinese central state-owned enterprise and drawing a US$9bn order book. The strong reception for perps encouraged Bharti Airtel to bring a rare Indian hybrid deal in October, as part of its plans to cut gearing. Fixed-for-life perpetuals, which dealt investors paper losses of as much as 20 points in 2018, also returned. Hong Kong’s New World Development revived interest with a private placement in March, then tapped the issue in July with a more widely marketed offering. The Philippines’ Ayala and AC Energy also used the structure last year.

Amount Name

Issues

US$(m) %

Amount Name

Issues US$(m)

to the dollar market nine times in 2019, raising a total of US$2.1bn. The Single B rated developer started the year with a US$200m 363-day note in January, priced at a yield of 10.75%, but as market conditions improved it achieved longer tenors at lower yields. In June, it printed a US$200m perpetual non-call 2.6 note at par to yield 10.25%. Debut issuers from China had an incentive to press ahead last year, as new guidelines introduced by the National Development and Reform Commission are expected to make it more difficult for firsttime issuers to win approval to sell offshore bonds. By having dollar bonds outstanding, they will be able to demonstrate a need for refinancing, which might help with offshore quota approval. Local government funding vehicles like Kunming Rail Transit Group and Shuifa Group sold first-time dollar issues, while tech company Weibo and private school operator Bright Scholar Education Holdings added some diversity to the market with their debut offerings.

Issues

US$(m) %

Name

%

Name

25,546.1 7.3

1 HSBC

310

35,341.8 8.9

1 HSBC

Issues US$(m) 283

30,120.0 8.6

%

174

23,992.7

2 Citigroup

151

18,816.8 5.4

1 Bank of China

1,486 154,614.6 7.5

1 KB Financial

617

2 ICBC

1,409 136,354.5 6.7

2 NH Inv & Sec

385

21,952.7 6.3

2 Citigroup

3 CCB

1,428 120,079.9 5.9

3 Korea Investment

541

18,298.0 5.2

3 Standard Chartered 194

18,214.5 4.6

3 Standard Chartered 193

18,157.8 5.2

4 BoCom

1,206 105,072.8 5.1

4 Kyobo Life

384

14,673.6 4.2

4 JP Morgan

118

17,056.7 4.3

4 Bank of China

207

14,988.1 4.3

6.1

5 Citic

1,086 102,933.8 5.0

5 Mirae Asset Daewoo 292

11,839.8 3.4

5 Bank of China

207

14,988.1 3.8

5 JP Morgan

103

12,943.5 3.7

6 ABC

1,012

90,155.8 4.4

6 Axis

174

11,823.1 3.4

6 Bank of America

107

14,306.5 3.6

6 Credit Agricole

87

12,920.1 3.7

7 CSC Financial

736

78,232.9 3.8

7 ICICI Bank

169

11,251.4 3.2

7 Goldman Sachs

75

13,142.8 3.3

7 Credit Suisse

114

11,065.7 3.2

8 Industrial Bank

818

60,035.7 2.9

8 Kiwoom Sec

247

11,104.4 3.2

8 Credit Agricole

88

13,034.2 3.3

8 Bank of America

95

11,008.9 3.2

9 HSBC

168

10,312.1 2.9

118

12,897.5 3.3

9 UBS

122

10,586.4 3.0

10 DB Financial Invest 192

9,688.7 2.8

132

12,879.7 3.3

66

10,514.4 3.0

9 China Merchants Bank 583 10 Guotai Junan Sec Total

458

49,574.7 2.4 45,896.8 2.2

11,748 2,049,293.2

Total

6,494 350,750.9

9 BNP Paribas 10 UBS Total

875 395,496.3

10 Goldman Sachs Total

797 349,236.3

*Market volume *Market volume

*Market volume

*Includes Asian Development Bank issuance.

*Market volume

Proportional credit

Proportional credit

Proportional credit

Proportional credit

Source: Refinitiv data

10

SDC Code: AS1

Source: Refinitiv data

SDC Code: AS1a

Source: Refinitiv data

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

SDC Code: AR1

Source: Refinitiv data

SDC Code: AR2


For daily news stories visit www.ifre.com

APAC lending resumes downtrend Loans League Tables Slower global growth weighs on syndication activity

event-driven financings, such as a HK$25.2bn (US$3.23bn) loan backing the take-private of Hopewell Holdings and a €4.56bn (US$5bn) takeout financing for CK Hutchison’s European, Hong Kong and Macau telecom operations. M&A lending in APAC (exJapan) rose 20.8% last year to US$42.59bn. Hong Kong accounted for 35% of the total and Australia, China and Indonesia were the only other growing regional markets in that segment. Notwithstanding strong event-

driven financings, Australian syndicated loan volumes still tumbled 20.5% to US$75.95bn in 2019 from US$95.53bn in 2018. Elsewhere, Singapore suffered a 11.7% year-on-year decline to US$45.62bn despite a mammoth S$8bn (US$5.86bn) financing for casino operator Marina Bay Sands in August. Loan volumes in China fell 16% to US$93.5bn because of muted deal flow and a slowing domestic economy. India and Indonesia also underperformed, slumping 24.5% and 11.6% respectively to US$18.2bn and US$12bn. Vietnam and the Philippines were among the few strongly growing markets. Both countries have been steadily increasing loan volumes in recent years and in 2019 doubled their 2018 tallies to respectively US$7.71bn and US$5.62bn. “ASEAN doesn’t see a lot of pain as a result of the ongoing trade war tensions, because the region has been supported by trade diversion, rising foreign direct investment and tourism,” said Aditya Agarwal, head of loan syndicate and sales at Maybank. “Vietnam continues to be a smaller but growing market. First-time issuers and even private sector [borrowers]

are looking at the offshore loans market.” Alternative sources of liquidity such as the growing institutional investor market in Australia and the Samurai loan market in Japan gave borrowers more options to extend tenors and squeeze pricing. High-grade credits, in particular, made the most of these dynamics and pressured relationship banks for tightly priced loans. “We will continue to see longer-tenor transactions with the main driver for this from investors given the potentially better returns and how low pricing is at the shorter end,” said Gavin Chappell, head of syndications, Australia at ANZ. The prospects for 2020, particularly financial sponsor and M&A-related lending, are looking strong. “In 2020, we expect the level of LBO activity to increase as private equity clients remain hungry to deploy capital and the fundamentals are strong,” said James Horsburgh, head of leveraged and acquisition finance in Asia Pacific at HSBC. “We are also helping Chinese clients acquire within Asia and Europe, and the take-private scene is coming back into focus.”

Top bookrunners of Asia Pacific

Top bookrunners of Asia Pacific

Top bookrunners of Asia Pacific

Top bookrunners of Asia Pacific

syndicated loans G3 currencies

syndicated loans Int’l currencies, Rmb

syndicated loans All currencies

syndicated loans All currencies

(ex-Japan, inc-Australia) 1/1/19 – 31/12/19

and NT$ (ex-Japan, inc-Australia) 1/1/19 – 31/12/19 Amount

(ex-Japan, inc-Australia) 1/1/19 – 31/12/19

(ex-Japan and Australia) 1/1/19 – 31/12/19

BY CHIEN MI WONG

Syndicated lending in Asia Pacific, excluding Japan, fell 4.2% in 2019 as the global economy stuttered from the protracted US-China trade tensions, resuming a multiyear downtrend that was only briefly interrupted the previous year. Loan volumes dropped to US$464.24bn from US$484.82bn despite a 10.3% increase in deal flow to 1,327 loans against 1,203 a year before. With last year’s decline, syndicated loans have now fallen for four of the past five years in the region. Declining interest rates encouraged borrowers to lock in cheap fixed-rate funding and G3 currency bond issuance from Asia Pacific surged to a two-year high of US$394.88bn in 2019 as a result, according to Refinitiv data. “There has been volume leakage from the loan to bond markets in 2019,” said Ashish Sharma, head of loan syndications in Asia Pacific at HSBC. “Bond markets have seen strong issuance, and it’s not just the volumes, but borrowers have got access to more diversified structures, tenors and currencies in Asia.”

Amount Name

Deals

US$(m)

%

1 Bank of China

43

11,989.1 8.3

2 HSBC

58

10,394.0 7.2

M&A REBOUND Hong Kong, despite taking an economic hit during six months of anti-government protests, stood out with a 24.3% jump in lending activity to a record US$137.48bn in 2019, grabbing a 30% share of APAC (ex-Japan) loan volumes. That performance was largely due to jumbo loans and

“There has been volume leakage from the loan to bond markets in 2019.”

Name 1 Bank of China

Deals 475

US$(m)

Amount %

Name

62,414.3 13.4

1 Bank of China

Deals 259

US$(m)

Amount %

Name

Deals

US$(m)

%

44,186.7 12.4

1 Bank of China

249 42,042.9 14.2

2 BoCom

2 BoCom

142

21,576.7 4.6

2 HSBC

98

18,067.5

80

16,484.5 5.6

3 HSBC

195

19,836.2 4.3

3 BoCom

80

16,484.5 4.6

3 Standard Chartered 97

13,836.0 4.7

6,914.9 4.8

4 ANZ

168

18,187.1 3.9

4 ANZ

91

16,404.1 4.6

4 HSBC

79

12,879.8 4.3

40

6,569.3 4.5

5 DBS

171

16,950.2 3.7

5 Standard Chartered 98

13,869.7 3.9

5 CCB

36

11,776.0 4.0

42

5,235.3 3.6

6 ICBC

130

16,770.0 3.6

6 CCB

38

12,180.6 3.4

6 State Bank of India

11

11,598.0 3.9

3 Standard Chartered 63

8,867.7

4 Mizuho

40

5 SMFG 6 DBS

6.1

7 ANZ

31

5,180.4 3.6

7 SMBC

159

14,312.2

7 State Bank of India

11

11,598.0 3.3

7 ABC

28

9,114.1

8 CCB

18

4,814.0 3.3

8 MUFG Bank

151

13,699.5 3.0

8 Mizuho

65

11,458.3 3.2

8 Mizuho

54

9,095.7

3.1

9 MUFG

36

4,342.8 3.0

9 CCB

118

13,422.6 2.9

9 SMFG

62

10,688.8 3.0

9 DBS

67

9,087.7

3.1

21

4,200.2 2.9

136

13,255.3 2.9

10 MUFG

60

9,238.2 2.6

10 SMFG

48

7,866.9 2.7

10 Deutsche Total

297 145,396.5

10 Mizuho Bank Total

3.1

5.1

1326 464,140.0 0.0

Total

*Market volume

*Market volume

*Market volume

Proportional credit

Proportional credit

Proportional credit

Source: Refinitiv data LPC

Source: Refinitiv data

Source: Refinitiv data

SDC Code: S3k

1,091 357,064.0

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

Total

3.1

929 297,048.4

*Market volume Proportional credit

SDC Code: S3

Source: Refinitiv data

SDC Code: S5c

11


League tables

Asia ECM set for busy first half Equities League Tables Issuers set to front-load deals ahead of US presidential election BY IFR EQUITIES REPORTERS

Equity capital markets bankers are expecting a busy first half in Asia-Pacific before the US presidential election in November is likely to bring uncertainty to the markets. Total equity issuance rose 6.8% in 2019 to US$235bn after sizable Chinese listings in the fourth quarter reversed a declining trend in the first nine months of the year. In the fourth quarter, Alibaba Group Holding raised HK$101bn (US$12.9bn) from a secondary listing in Hong Kong and Postal Savings Bank of China raised Rmb32.7bn (US$4.7bn) from a Shanghai IPO. Looking ahead, there is not much visibility about large Chinese IPOs yet. The biggest live deal in the pipeline is the US$3bn Hong Kong IPO of China Bohai Bank, but bankers are hoping tech giants such as ByteDance and Ant Financial could also come to market this year. Global equity and equity-related Asia Pacific incl Australasia, ex Japan 1/1/19 – 31/12/19 Name

Issues

However, follow-on offerings from Chinese issuers are likely to be a major volume driver this year. “We are expecting to see more US-listed Chinese companies seek a secondary listing in Hong

“We are expecting to see more US-listed Chinese companies seek a secondary listing in Hong Kong and more Chinese issuers selling GDRs in London.”

both planning to sell global depositary receipts in London. Bankers are expecting deals to hit the market before the US presidential election. Despite sabre-rattling between the US and Iran, issuers from China to India last week sealed big transactions, including a US$3bn share placement and convertible bond from Bharti Airtel, a HK$8bn primary follow-on from Sunac China and US$980m follow-on and CB from Luckin Coffee.

Kong and more Chinese issuers selling GDRs in London,” said Peihao Huang, head of Asia ECM at UBS. US-listed Chinese technology companies Trip.com, Netease and Baidu are all considering share sales in Hong Kong, while SDIC Power and China Pacific Insurance (Group) are

MORE DIVERSITY In a break from recent Chinadominated years, a more diverse crop of Asian IPOs is on the cards in 2020. India’s SBI Cards is set to raise US$1.35bn in the first quarter while Thai Beverage is planning an up to US$2bn SGX IPO of its regional brewery business in the first half. SK Biopharmaceuticals may also come to market in the first half with an up to US$1bn

Top bookrunners of global common

Top bookrunners of global convertible

stock Asia Pacific (ex-Japan) 1/1/19 – 31/12/19 Amount

offering Asia Pacific (ex-Japan) 1/1/19 – 31/12/19 Amount

Issues

US$(m) %

Amount

1 Morgan Stanley

Name

68

13,218.3 7.1

US$(m) %

2 CICC

63 10,958.4 5.9

Name

Issues

US$(m) %

1 Citic

18

6,519.8 11.9

2 Goldman Sachs

12

5,046.1 9.2

7

3,980.8 7.3

1 Citic

79

15,910.1 6.8

3 UBS

76 10,698.5 5.8

3 CICC

2 Goldman Sachs

66

15,303.7 6.5

4 JP Morgan

56

10,655.7 5.7

4 Huatai Sec

13

3,811.4 7.0

3 CICC

70

14,939.2 6.4

5 Goldman Sachs

55

10,333.0 5.6

5 China Sec

18

3,537.3 6.5

4 Morgan Stanley

77

14,474.1 6.2

6 Citic

61

9,390.3 5.1

6 Guotai Junan Sec

8

2,730.1 5.0

5 JP Morgan

59

11,197.3 4.8

7 Citigroup

62

9,029.8 4.9

7 Bank of China

4

2,442.7 4.5

6 UBS

74

11,158.9 4.8

8 Credit Suisse

54

6,549.1 3.5

8 Haitong Sec

8

2,388.0 4.4

7 Citigroup

71

10,031.8 4.3

9 HSBC

25

5,661.4 3.1

9 Credit Suisse

11

2,125.8 3.9

8 Credit Suisse

63

8,585.1 3.7

10 Bank of America

28

5,480.8 3.0

10 Citigroup

10

1,697.7 3.1

9 China Sec

56

7,444.2 3.2

11 China Sec

38

3,906.9 2.1

11 UBS

6

1,651.4 3.0

35

7,055.5 3.0

12 China Merchants Sec

25

3,351.2 1.8

12 Ping An Sec

4

1,592.3 2.9 1,574.8 2.9

10 Bank of America 11 Huatai Sec

37

6,361.3 2.7

13 Deutsche

26

2,913.4 1.6

13 Bank of America

7

12 HSBC

29

6,162.3 2.6

14 Haitong Sec

60

2,853.7 1.5

14 JP Morgan

9

1,305.7 2.4

13 Guotai Junan Sec

51

5,553.0 2.4

15 Guotai Junan Sec

43

2,823.0 1.5

15 Morgan Stanley

9

1,255.8 2.3

14 Haitong Sec

68

5,241.7 2.2

16 ICBC

20

2,623.3 1.4

16 China Merchants Sec

6

1,249.3 2.3

15 China Merchants Sec

31

4,600.5 2.0

17 DBS

23

2,589.2 1.4

17 GF Sec

8

944.4 1.7

16 GF Sec

34

3,180.4 1.4

18 Huatai Sec

24

2,549.9 1.4

18 Huarong Sec

5

747.1 1.4

17 Deutsche

28

3,158.7 1.4

19 Macquarie

29

2,489.5 1.3

19 Everbright Sec

2

651.7 1.2

20 GF Sec

26

2,236.0 1.2

20 Shenwan Hongyuan Sec

4

621.8 1.1

18 Bank of China

21

3,147.9 1.3

19 DBS

24

2,724.2 1.2

Total

2,623.3 1.1

Market volume

20 ICBC

20

Total

1,805

Source: Refinitiv data

12

234,687.9

2,023 185,716.0

Total

185 54,660.4

*Market volume

Proportional credit

Proportional credit

Source: Refinitiv data

SDC Code: C4a2

Source: Refinitiv data

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

SDC Code: C9b1

KRX listing. Other upcoming large nonChinese IPOs include Thailand’s Central Retail (US$2.7bn), PTT Oil and Retail (US$2bn) and SCG Packaging (US$1bn). In India, bankers anticipate more IPOs and QIPs in 2020 and forecast issuance volume of up to US$30bn, compared to US$21bn in 2019. “The good news is that most IPOs and QIPs made money for investors in 2019 and if pricing remains realistic they will continue to buy,” a Mumbaibased ECM banker said. Australian ECM activity is expected to be dominated by secondary offerings with strong deal flow driven by M&A transactions. Jun Bei Liu, portfolio manager at Tribeca Investment Partners, expects more activity particularly in sectors such as industrials, resources and energy that offer attractive valuations. A-SHARE BOOM China’s A-share market is set for a busy year, after regulators made it easier for domestic companies to raise capital with a series of rule changes, such as the follow-on rules announced in the second half of 2019. “Previous reforms in China’s capital markets normally only targeted specific areas. The reform last year, however, was across the board and this could help drive activity,” said Wei Shanwei, deputy general manager at Huajing Securities. Another significant development is ChiNext’s plan to adopt the registration-based IPO system, raising hopes that the Nasdaq-style board of the Shenzhen Stock Exchange may replicate the success of the Shanghai Star market. “There will be more A-share IPOs this year and we expect around 70% of them to come from Star board and ChiNext,” said Wang Feng, partner at law firm Jingtian & Gongcheng.


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People Markets

&

TOP STORY LEAGUE TABLES

Asian IB fees climb to record high

Chinese banks gobble up market share after bumper 2019 Asian investment banking fees climbed to a record high in 2019 after a blowout year in credit and a strong end to the year in equities, belying concerns about the impact of slowing global growth and a protracted US-China trade dispute. Overall investment banking fees in !SIAรป0ACIlCรปEX *APANรปINรป รปCAMEรปINรปATรป 53 BN รปACCORDINGรปTOรป2ElNITIVรปDATA รปANรป increase of 10% year on year and slightly ahead of the previous record of US$21.92bn in 2017. China, unsurprisingly, accounted for the lionโ s share of the fees in the region, Full Year 2019 IB Fee League Table ASIA PACIFIC (EX-JAPAN) Values fees Name

(US$m)

%

1

Bank of China

1,237.28

5.59

2

Citic

1,006.93

4.55

3

ICBC

806.02

3.64

4

HSBC

609.22

2.75

5

BoCom

589.34

2.66

6

CCB

573.43

2.59

7

CICC

547.48

2.47

8

UBS

541.05

2.45

9

Goldman Sachs

531.77

2.40

10 Citigroup

529.27

2.39

11 Morgan Stanley

487.93

2.21

12 ABC

481.33

2.18

13 JP Morgan

474.22

2.14

14 Credit Suisse

469.89

2.12

15 Guotai Junan Sec

413.17

1.87

Grand Total

12,157.62

54.94

Total

22,127.61

100.00

Source: Re๏ฌ nitiv

53 BNรปOVERALL รปUPรปALMOSTรปAรปlFTHรปYEARรป on year, as a slowing of the countryโ s deleveraging campaign and reforms to its listing regime increased deal opportunities. 4HISรปWASรปREmECTEDรปINรปTHEรปLEAGUEรปTABLEรป rankings with Chinese banks and brokerage lRMSรปTAKINGรปSIXรปOUTรปOFรปTHEรปTOPรปSEVENรป positions for overall fees compared with three in the previous year. BANK OF CHINA, which tends to dominate the league tables on the back of its strong syndicated lending business, remained INรปlRSTรปPLACE รปGENERATINGรป53 BNรปINรป investment banking fees for a 5.6% share of wallet. The data capture revenues from equity and debt underwriting, syndicated lending and M&A advisory. CITIC, which includes China Citic Bank, Citic Securities and CLSA, retained its second spot, closing the gap on Bank of China following a particularly strong year in equity capital markets, where it jumped THREEรปPLACESรปTOรปlRST HSBC was the only international bank among the top seven, rising three places to fourth, as it dominated G3 bond underwriting with a 7.3% wallet share. UBS fell two places to eighth, while GOLDMAN SACHS and CITIGROUP โ both falling SIXรปPLACESรปTOรปNINTHรปANDรป TH รปRESPECTIVELYรป โ were the only other international banks among the top 10 for overall fees. RISING TIDE Despite losing ground to their Chinese competitors in the investment banking LEAGUEรปTABLES รปINTERNATIONALรปBANKSรปBENElTEDรป

from a strong year in credit, which accounted for almost half of investment banking fees in the region last year. Overall DCM fees came in at US$10.52bn, an increase of almost 40% year on year, as the combination of a more dovish US Federal Reserve and the impact of Chinaโ s slowing deleveraging campaign helped raise overall deal volumes, particularly in the lucrative high-yield sector. Fees from G3 bonds reached US$2.71bn last year, an increase of 38% year on year. This even surpassed the record US$2.41bn set in 2017 as high-yield issuance boomed, particularly from Chinaโ s real estate sector. โ Despite the trade war crosswinds having a dampening effect on the overall economy and keeping a lid on investment-grade funding, 2019 will go down as a vintage year for Asian credit, especially for high yield,โ said Haitham Ghattas, head of ASIA PACIFIC IB FEES (EXCLUDING JAPAN) (US$BN) 25 20 15 10 5 0

2014

2015

BONDS

2016 EQUITY

2017

2018 LOANS

2019 M&A

Source: Re๏ฌ nitiv

Whoโ s moving where... ย Bi Mingjian, chief executive of๏ฌ cer of CHINA INTERNATIONAL CAPITAL CORPORATION,

has resigned. According to an announcement from CICC, Bi resigned for career reasons. Huang Zhaohui, head of CICCโ s investment banking division, replaces Bi as CEO. Bi, who helped set

14

up CICC in 1995, returned to the countryโ s oldest investment bank in 2015 as CEO. He is credited for having helped shift the bankโ s strategy towards retail brokerage following the acquisition of China Investment Securities in 2016.

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

Former HSBC Greater China chief executive Helen Wong is joining OCBC BANK as deputy president and head of global wholesale banking. Wong, whose appointment is effective February 3, will have oversight of the transaction banking business including cash

management and trade as well as investment banking. She reports to CEO Samuel Tsien. Wong, who started her career at OCBC Bank in 1984, stood down from HSBC in July last year. She had been with the emerging markets lender for over 25 years.


For daily news stories visit www.ifre.com

capital markets for APAC at Deutsche Bank. International banks took three of the top four positions in the G3 fee league tables. In addition to HSBC, CREDIT SUISSE ranked third with a 4.5% share of wallet, while Citigroup was fourth with a 4.4% market share.

China suspends London Stock Connect scheme

ECM REVIVAL ECM was the only other asset class where fees rose for the full year, up 3% to US$5.18bn, as IPO activity rebounded during the second half and equity-linked business remained robust throughout the year. Overall fees from IPOs jumped 65% to US$1.62bn during the second half on THEรปBACKรปOFรปAรปmURRYรปOFรปBIG TICKETรปDEALSรปINรป Hong Kong including Alibabaโ s HK$101bn (US$13bn) secondary listing, the HK$45bn spin-off of Anheuser-Busch InBevโ s APAC unit and Topsports Internationalโ s HK$7.9bn IPO. โ While the IPO market last year was a bit softer overall than the previous year, we started to see a lot more deals get done during the second half as valuations became more realistic,โ said Gaetano Bassolino, head of global banking for APAC at UBS. โ When you compare the second half of last year with the second half of รปTHEรปlGURESรปLOOKรปQUITEรปGOOD v Fees from equity-linked deals edged up to US$611m from US$610m a year earlier following a number of big deals during THEรปlRSTรปHALF รปINรปPARTICULARรปINรปONSHOREรป China, such as the Rmb40bn (US$$5.75bn) convertible bond from China Citic Bank and the Rmb26bn CB of Ping An Bank. Fees from loan underwriting fell 13% to US$3.61bn as borrowers opted to tap the debt markets instead due to lower interest rates, while M&A fees fell 18% to US$2.82bn as stalling growth and the US-China trade war led to a dearth of sizeable, strategic deals.

China has temporarily blocked planned cross-border listings between the 3HANGHAIรปANDรป,ONDONรปSTOCKรปEXCHANGESรป because of political tensions with the UK, lVEรปSOURCESรปTOLDรป2EUTERS The sources, who include public OFlCIALSรปANDรปPEOPLEรปWORKINGรปONรปPOTENTIALรป Shanghai-London deals, all said that politics was behind the suspension. Two of them highlighted the UKโ s stance over the Hong Kong protests and one pointed to remarks over the detention of a now former staff member at its consulate in Hong Kong. !LLรปlVEรปSOURCESรปHAVEรปBEENรปINVOLVEDรปINรป TALKSรปWITHรป#HINESEรปOFlCIALSรปANDรปSPOKEรป to Reuters on condition of anonymity because they are not authorised to speak about the matter publicly. The China Securities Regulatory Commission subsequently denied that the Connect scheme had been halted. โ Media reports on (the) postponement of Shanghai-London Stock Connect do not match facts,โ Chang Depeng, a spokesman for the CSRC, said at a news BRIElNGรปINรป"EIJINGรปONรป*ANUARYรป โ From the opening of the ShanghaiLondon Stock Connect to now, it has been operating normally.โ A spokesperson for the London Stock %XCHANGEรปANDรปAรปSPOKESWOMANรปFORรป THEรป5+ SรปlNANCEรปMINISTRYรปDECLINEDรปTOรป comment. Shanghai-London Stock Connect, which began operating last year, was devised as a way of improving the UKโ s relationship

THOMAS BLOTT

with the worldโ s second biggest economy and was seen as a major step by China to open up its capital markets as well as linking them globally. CHINA CHILL HUATAI SECURITIESรปWASรปTHEรปlRSTรป#HINESEรป company to use the scheme in May, with SDIC POWER set to become the second in December with a listing of global depositary receipts in London representing 10% of its share capital. However, the alternative energy operatorโ s deal was postponed at an advanced stage, with SDIC Power citing market conditions as the main reason. Five sources told Reuters SDIC Powerโ s deal was halted because of Beijingโ s suspension of Stock Connect. Other hopefuls such as CHINA PACIFIC INSURANCE, which one of the sources said could have launched a deal as early as the lRSTรปQUARTERรปOFรป รปHAVEรปALSOรปBEENรปTOLDรป to put their cross-border listing plans on ice, they added. 3$)#รป0OWERรปANDรป#HINAรป0ACIlCรป)NSURANCEรป did not respond to requests for comment. โ Itโ s not only a big blow to the companies looking to broaden the investor base via listings in London, but also to Chinaโ s links with global markets,โ one source, who has worked on one of the GDR deals, told Reuters. Trouble with the scheme comes at a bad time for the UK, which is keen to build ties with non-EU countries as it prepares to leave the bloc, and the LSE. 4HEรป,ONDONรปEXCHANGEรปWASรปSETรปFORรปITSรป worst year in terms of new listings in AรปDECADEรปASรปOFรป$ECEMBERรป รป2ElNITIVรป data showed, with political volatility and concerns over the UKโ s EU divorce crimping stock market fundraisings.

ABHINAV RAMNARAYAN, JULIE ZHU

Please contact us if you have information about job moves: people.markets@re๏ฌ nitiv.com Former Mizuho Securities debt capital markets banker Pramod Shenoi has joined research ๏ฌ rm CREDITSIGHTS as head of Asia Paci๏ฌ c ๏ฌ nancial institutions research. Shenoi was previously head of DCM for the ๏ฌ nancial institutions group in Asia exJapan at Mizuho, a

position he held for two-and-a-half years before leaving in May last year. Prior to that, he worked at Standard Chartered and also worked at Nomura having joined the bank following its acquisition of Lehman Brothersโ European and Asian businesses in 2008.

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

NATIXIS has hired

Bianca Law (pictured) as head of sponsor ๏ฌ nance for Asia in its corporate and investment bank. Based in Hong Kong, she reports to JeanThomas Haller, head of acquisition and strategic ๏ฌ nance in Asia Paci๏ฌ c. Law previously led the loan syndications

team at Standard Chartered in Hong Kong. Natixis has also hired Miranda Zhao as head of M&A in APAC. Based in Hong Kong, she reports to Raghu Narain, head of APAC investment banking. She was most recently head of M&A at China Everbright.

15


People Markets

&

Singapore gets 21 digital banking bids

Singaporeโ s banking liberalisation is its biggest in two decades and follows similar moves in Hong Kong, which issued eight online banking licences last year. The Monetary Authority of Singapore said it received strong interest from a

Singapore has drawn huge interest from technology companies looking to shake up the city-stateโ s banking landscape, ATTRACTINGรป รปAPPLICATIONSรปFORรปlVEรปDIGITALรป bank licences on offer. Among the bidders are Alibaba Group AFlLIATEรปANT FINANCIAL, a venture between SINGAPORE TELECOMMUNICATIONS and South-East Asian ride-hailer GRAB, and a consortium led BYรปGAMINGรปlRMรปRAZER. 3INGAPORE BASEDรปINTERNETรปlRMรปSEA, a group led by Singapore tycoon Ron Simโ s V3 GROUP, and a consortium led by Hong Kong lNANCIALรปSERVICESรปGROUPรปAMTD, which also INCLUDESรปANรปAFlLIATEรปOFรปXIAOMI, have applied as well. Roughly 50 companies are involved in the bidding, sources told Reuters.

Singaporeโ s banking liberalisation is its biggest in two decades and follows similar moves in Hong Kong, which issued eight online banking licences last year. diverse group of applicants but did not name them. Seven bidders are for retail banks and the rest are for wholesale banks. h4HESEรปINCLUDEรปE COMMERCEรปlRMS รป technology and telecommunications COMPANIES รปlNTECHSรป SUCHรปASรปCROWDFUNDINGรป platforms and payment services providers) ANDรปlNANCIALรปINSTITUTIONS vรป-!3รปSAIDรปLASTรป Tuesday.

4HEรปONLINE ONLYรปBANKSรปAREรปEXPECTEDรปTOรป operate at lower costs and offer services that differ from local incumbents such as DBS Group and Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp. Licensing requirements are generally stricter than other markets such as Hong +ONG รป2ETAILรปBANKรปLICENCEES รปFORรปEXAMPLE รป will need S$1.5bn (US$1.1bn) in paid-up capital. Singapore is issuing up to two retail and three wholesale bank licences. Accredited retail digital banks will be able to accept deposits from and offer services to both retail and nonretail customers, although they must be headquartered in Singapore and controlled by Singaporeans. Wholesale banks will mostly serve small and medium-sized enterprises and will not be subject to local control restrictions. Singapore will announce the winners INรป*UNEรปANDรปDIGITALรปBANKSรปAREรปSETรปTOรปSTARTรป operations from mid-2021 onwards. ANSHUMAN DAGA

Whoโ s moving where... MUFG BANK has

appointed Johnson Yuan to lead its China corporate banking business. Yuan, who was most recently head of China corporate banking at Citigroup, reports to Liu Lihong, deputy president of MUFG China, and Tony Lee, MUFGโ s head of global

16

corporate and investment banking for East Asia, in his new role. Yuan started his banking career in 1993 with Sanwa Bank, one of MUFGโ s predecessor banks. He worked at Citigroup between 2005 and 2018.

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

CREDIT SUISSE has strengthened its China prime brokerage team with two hires. Michelle Lim has joined as head of China prime sales and business development, while Henry Lam has been appointed director in the prime sales team. Lim was most

recently head of China prime brokerage sales at Deutsche Bank, while Lam was a director at the German investment bank. Last year, Deutsche exited equities trading and underwriting in the region as part of a larger retrenchment globally.


For daily news stories visit www.ifre.com

Goldman revamps business structure GOLDMAN SACHS has realigned its banking business segments to more closely match its rivals and allow analysts and investors more insight into how it makes money. 4HEĂťCHANGESĂťAREĂťTHEĂťlNALĂťTOUCHESĂťONĂťAĂť major revamp of the investment bank as CHIEFĂťEXECUTIVEĂť$AVIDĂť3OLOMONĂťLOOKSĂťTOĂťPUTĂť HISĂťSTAMPĂťONĂťTHEĂťlRMĂťAHEADĂťOFĂťITSĂťlRSTĂťEVERĂť INVESTORĂťDAYĂťPRESENTATIONĂťONĂť*ANUARYĂť The changes should also make it easy for investors to understand and appreciate the business, potentially reviving the stock price which has underperformed relative to peers. The new business segments are: investment banking, global markets, asset management, and consumer and wealth management. The changes eliminate an all-encompassing “investing and lendingâ€? segment that frustrated analysts who argued the unit was opaque. Goldman said the realignment “will NOTĂťONLYĂťBETTERĂťREmECTĂťHOWĂťTHEĂťlRMĂťISĂť now managed, but also help drive greater ACCOUNTABILITYĂťFORĂťEXECUTINGĂťITSĂťFORWARDĂť strategy.â€? Wells Fargo bank analyst Mike Mayo applauded the “intensityâ€? of the revamp. “The new business segments are being IMPLEMENTEDĂťSOONERĂťTHANĂťEXPECTEDĂťANDĂť with more logic,â€? Mayo said. “This attitude shows that management is aware of an underperforming stock price.â€? “I think transparency has improved as a result of the changes,â€? said Keefe, Bruyette & Woods analyst Brian Kleinhanzl. “At the end of the day, we believe that a

discounted multiple was put on Goldman’s more stable revenues in the investing and lending business, but it will likely take time for that discount to reverse after the segment reporting changes.� SHIFTING SEGMENTS The results previously included in the investing and lending segment will now be spread across the four segments. Investment banking will now include the results from lending to corporate clients, including middle-market lending, relationship lending and acquisition lNANCING ÝPREVIOUSLYÝREPORTEDÝINÝINVESTINGÝ and lending. Institutional client services has been renamed global markets. The new group WILLÝINCLUDEÝTHEÝRESULTSÝFROMÝlXED INCOMEÝ and equity trading as well as items previously reported in investing and lending, including results from warehouse LENDINGÝANDÝSTRUCTUREDÝlNANCINGÝTOÝ institutional clients. The results from transactions in derivatives related to client advisory and underwriting assignments, which were previously reported in investment banking, will also now be reported in global markets. Investment management has been renamed asset management. It incorporates results from investments in equity securities and lending activities related to Goldman’s asset management businesses, including investments in debt securities and loans backed by real estate, both previously reported in investing and lending. Consumer and wealth management is a new segment that includes management and other fees. It also comprises results from loans through Goldman’s private bank, and unsecured loans and deposits through its Marcus digital bank. PHILIP SCIPIO

IN BRIEF Jho Low Says it ain’t so Fugitive Malaysian ďŹ nancier Jho Low has said he only acted as an intermediary for deals involving 1MDB, denying in an interview with a Singaporean newspaper that he had set the stage for the theft of billions of dollars from the Malaysian state fund. Low faces charges in the US and Malaysia for his alleged central role in defrauding up to US$4.5bn from 1MDB, founded by former Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak and the subject of the US Department of Justice’s largest ever antikleptocracy case. “People and companies act as introducers or intermediaries all the time,â€? Low said in an interview with Singapore’s Straits Times. “This is not a unique situation. I was requested to assist because of my good relationships with inuential foreign businessmen and decisionmakers.â€? A spokesman for Low did not immediately respond to a request for additional comments. To a question on why he has remained on the run, Low said the Malaysian government has victimised him and his family, ignoring “basic human rights and fair judicial processesâ€? by branding him as the mastermind behind the scandal. Malaysia’s prime minister’s ofďŹ ce did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Low said his “professional connectionsâ€? had helped Malaysia build strong ties with key allies, particularly Saudi Arabia, boosting Haj pilgrimage quotas for Malaysian Muslims and investments in ďŹ nancial, real estate and other sectors in the South-East Asian country. Low declined to divulge his current location but conďŹ rmed he was offered asylum in August last year. He did not name the country offering asylum. Low, who said he has had “multiple brushes with cancerâ€?, said he now plans to focus on investing in cutting-edge cancer research.

Please contact us if you have information about job moves: people.markets@reďŹ nitiv.com HONG KONG EXCHANGES AND CLEARING’s head

of strategy James Fok has joined the London Metal Exchange on secondment as strategic adviser. Till Rosar, until recently senior vice president of group strategy and head of investor relations, replaces him. A former Citigroup

investment banker and uent Mandarin speaker, Fok led HKEx’s £31.6bn (US$41.28bn) bid for the London Stock Exchange Group last year, which was rejected by LSE and called off after failing to garner enough investor support. HKEx acquired LME in 2012 for £1.4bn.

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

CREDIT SUISSE has launched a new equity research team in Asia PaciďŹ c focused on quantitative strategy. The new APAC quantitative and systematic strategy team will be led by Will Stephens, who was most recently head of Delta One strategy and regional

head of equity strategy at Deutsche Bank. He is joined by two other former Deutsche colleagues, Elita Lai and Dave Yin, who have assumed the roles of equity quantitative strategist and quantitative analyst respectively. All three are based in Hong Kong.

17


People Markets

&

People’s Bank of China Reserve requirement cut again China’s central bank cut the amount of cash that banks must hold as reserves, releasing around Rmb800bn (US$114.91bn) in funds to shore up growth. The PEOPLE’S BANK OF CHINA said on January 1 the cut would lower banks’ reserve requirement ratio by 50bp. The move brings the level for big banks down to 12.5%. The reduction came into effect last Monday. The move sparked a rally in global equities, with the Nasdaq Composite hitting a record high, although some of those gains were later reversed as US-Iran tensions escalated following the killing of Iranian military commander Qassem Soleimani. Many investors had expected Beijing to announce more support measures. While recent data have shown signs of improvement and Beijing and Washington have agreed to de-escalate their long trade war, analysts are unsure if either will prove sustainable and forecast growth will cool further this year. Premier Li Keqiang raised expectations of an imminent RRR cut in a speech in late December, saying authorities were considering more measures to lower financing costs for smaller companies, including broad-based and “targeted” RRR reductions. “The RRR cut will help boost investor confidence and support the economy, which is gradually steadying,” said Wen Bin, an economist at Minsheng Bank in Beijing, who also expects another cut in China’s new loan prime rate this month. Freeing up more liquidity also reduces the risk of a credit crunch ahead of the Lunar New Year holiday later this month when demand for cash surges.

MUFG Bank US$2bn Danamon write-down

But shares of Danamon have tumbled since and last month hit their lowest level in nearly three years, at Rp3,640. The shares were down by nearly half last year and were hit particularly hard in May after index provider MSCI removed the bank from its Global Standard index due to low liquidity.

Anbang Chengdu RCB stake up for sale China’s ANBANG INSURANCE GROUP, which was taken over by the government last year, said it has put its 35% stake in CHENGDU RURAL COMMERCIAL BANK up for sale for Rmb16.5bn (US$2.4bn), its second attempt to offload the lender. The planned sale, revealed in a filing with the Beijing Financial Assets Exchange on December 31, comes as the previously acquisitive conglomerate has been selling off assets following a government takeover in February 2018. The government stepped in as part of a campaign to curb financial risk in the aftermath of a massive asset-buying spree by a handful of private sector conglomerates. Anbang’s previous chairman, Wu Xiaohui, has since been sentenced to prison for 18 years for embezzlement. Anbang previously tried to sell Chengdu RCB for Rmb16.8bn in December 2018, only to withdraw the offer in January last year without explanation. Anbang is the biggest shareholder of state-backed Chengdu RCB. In the event of multiple bids for Anbang’s stake in the bank, the Beijing Financial Assets Exchange will conduct an auction that will conclude on February 1, the filing said. Chengdu RCB was one of four banks flagged by former UBS analyst Jason Bedford in a 2017 report on the build-up of trust beneficiary rights and directional asset management plans, effectively loans disguised as investment products. The three others – Baoshang Bank, Bank of Jinzhou and Hengfeng Bank – have all since been the subject of government rescues in one guise or another.

The banking unit of Japan’s MITSUBISHI UFJ FINANCIAL GROUP said it would book a one-off charge of about ¥207.4bn (US$1.9bn) for the quarter ended December 31 due to a drop in the share price of its Indonesian subsidiary, BANK DANAMON INDONESIA. Danamon, of which MUFG Bank owns 94.1%, closed at Rp3,950 on December 30, the Indonesia Stock Exchange’s last trading day of 2019. Under accounting rules, if Danamon’s shares close below 50% of the average price MUFG paid for its stake, the Japanese bank is required to reassess the value of the holding and book a one-time charge. MUFG did not disclose the price level where it would be required to book an extraordinary charge. It has built up its stake through a series of acquisitions. In April, it more than doubled its holding to 94% from 40%, paying Rp9,590 a share, according to a filing.

India’s market regulator has again tightened rules around credit ratings, this time blocking investment-grade ratings for companies that fail to cooperate with rating agencies.The SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE BOARD OF INDIA said that rating agencies must downgrade any outstanding ratings to non-investment grade if an issuer has failed to cooperate for more than six months. If the issuer fails to cooperate for another six months, the agency will not assign any new ratings to such an issuer until it cooperates. On November 21, Sebi ordered all listed companies to disclose on the stock exchanges any default on payment of interest on non-convertible debentures

18

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

Securities and Investment Board of India Tightening of credit rating rules

and non-convertible redeemable preference shares within 24 hours. Listed companies must also disclose any default on loans and cash credit facilities from financial institutions that continue beyond 30 days. Rating agencies are obliged to downgrade an issuer to default as soon as any debt is overdue, but analysts argue they often do not have sufficient access to information to make those calls. The latest rule changes come after rating agencies failed to raise red flags ahead of defaults by shadow lenders, notably Infrastructure Leasing and Financial Services in September 2018. Separately, on December 26, Sebi fined Icra, the Indian arm of Moody’s, and Care Rs2.5m (US$35,100) each for failing to “to exercise proper skill, care and due diligence” when assigning ratings to IL&FS.

SFC RHB fined over conflicts of interest The Securities and Futures Commission of Hong Kong has fined RHB SECURITIES HK$6.4m (US$820,000) for failing to comply with regulatory requirements over conflicts of interest. The securities regulator said that RHB failed to properly implement its policy for avoiding conflicts of interest between its research reports and investment banking relationships. It also failed to adequately disclose its investment banking relationship with a listed company in a research report published in November 2015. Further, the SFC said that RHB failed to adequatly monitor the trading activities of its research analysts. RHB’s fine comes less than a year after the SFC publicly censured Nomura for failing to comply with restrictions on the issuance of research reports on a company it was advising.

Fidelity Fine for unlicensed futures trading Hong Kong’s market watchdog fined a local unit of Fidelity HK$3.5m (US$450,000) for trading nearly US$40bn of futures contracts without an appropriate licence. The trades took place from 2007 to 2018 and while the asset manager identified the incident itself, it did not report it to the regulator for two months, rather than immediately as required. The unit, FIL INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT (HONG KONG), has multiple other licences from the Securities and Futures Commission, but it did not, at that time, have a licence to deal in futures contracts, and relied on exemptions to carry out the activity. “We have taken all steps necessary to improve our internal controls,” said a Fidelity spokeswoman, adding that the company regretted that the incident took place.


For daily news stories visit www.ifre.com

Singapore to scrutinise retail bond sales Singapore dollar retail bond offerings are set to come under tighter scrutiny FOLLOWINGĂťTHEĂťHIGH PROlLEĂťDEFAULTĂťOFĂťWATERĂť TREATMENTĂťCOMPANYĂť(YmUX A working group of industry professionals set up by SGX REGCO, the REGULATORĂťOFĂť3INGAPOREĂť%XCHANGE ĂťWILLĂť review the current retail bond framework, particularly admission criteria for retail bond listings, the continuing obligations of bond issuers and ways to protect bondholder interests in the event of a default or restructuring. The working group comprises banks, INVESTORĂťREPRESENTATIVESĂťANDĂťLAWĂťlRMS Ăť Representatives from Perpetual Asia, Allen & Gledhill, Allen & Overy, Clifford Chance, DBS Bank, OCBC Bank, UOB Bank and the Securities Investors Association Singapore will present their recommendations and views to SGX RegCo by mid-2020. A public consultation will take place by the end of the year. “The possibility of tightening the admission criteria including requiring

a minimum level of subscription by institutional investors and a credit rating are among matters to be discussed,� said Michael Tang, head of listing policy and product admission. “The working group will also provide views on how individual investors can be

“The working group will also provide views on how individual investors can be better served when bonds they hold are in distress. We want to hear suggestions on how to fund trustees acting for bondholders and ways to help bondholders organise themselves.â€? better served when bonds they hold are in distress. We want to hear suggestions on how to fund trustees acting for bondholders and ways to help bondholders organise themselves.â€? A framework was introduced in 2016 to streamline the issuance of retail bonds, subject to criteria such as a minimum MARKETĂťCAPITALISATIONĂťANDĂťHAVINGĂťEXISTINGĂť listed securities. Since then, issuers such as

Temasek Holdings, Singapore Airlines and Astrea Capital have sold debt securities to retail investors. “The framework would have been very useful but the timing of the introduction was just not right and the retail market has not really taken off since,â€? said one debt capital markets banker. Singaporean marine services companies, hit by a protracted downturn in the oil and gas industry, began defaulting in 2016 when Swiber Holdings defaulted on some US$868m of debt, half of which was in Singapore dollar-denominated bonds. The majority of the defaulted bonds from the oil and gas sector were sold mainly to highnet-worth individuals, who failed in their attempts to push bond trustees to act on their behalf. Bond restructurings came to a critical POINTĂťWHENĂť(YmUXĂťDEFAULTEDĂťONĂť3 BNĂť (US$2.07bn) worth of debt. Retail investors held around S$200m of the water treatment company’s 8% preference shares and over S$300m of its 6% perpetual notes. The defaults have soured retail investor interest in Singapore dollar bonds. “My view is the review is not meant to tighten the framework but to clarify what additional safeguards and scrutiny are needed,â€? said the DCM banker. KIT YIN BOEY

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International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

19


COUNTRY REPORT Australia 20 China 24 Hong Kong 38 India 40 Indonesia 44 Japan 46 Malaysia 47 Mongolia 48 New Zealand 48 Philippines 49 Singapore 50 South Korea 52 Sri Lanka 52 Taiwan 52 Thailand 53 Vietnam 55

CBA prints tight sterling

AUSTRALIA

Bonds Rare Sonia-linked Aussie major bank sale prices flat to UK comps

DEBT CAPITAL MARKETS › NAB PRINTS TIGHT YANKEE THREE-YEAR NATIONAL AUSTRALIA BANK (Aa3/AA–/AA–) kicked off its 2020 issuance programme last Monday with a tightly priced US$1.75bn two-part senior unsecured short three-year note offering. A US$750m 1.875% 3(a)2 December 13 2022 bond drew an order book of US$1.5bn as joint bookrunners Bank of America, Citigroup, NAB and RBC Capital Markets priced well inside high 50s IPTs at Treasuries plus 43bp, flat to NAB’s 3.7% November 2021s. A US$1bn 144A/Reg S floating-rate note secured US$2.3bn of demand before pricing 41bp wide of three-month US Libor. NAB overcame strong competition as one of 16 transactions in the US highgrade market last Monday which raised a combined US$24.15bn.

› WESTPAC RAISES BUMPER US$4BN (Aa3/AA–/AA–) followed in NAB’s slipstream last Thursday by taking a combined US$4bn from highly receptive US bond markets. A US$2.25bn multi-tranche SECregistered senior unsecured Global sale comprising three US$750m offerings attracted a whopping US$8.8bn of combined orders, including US$3.7bn for the longer-dated note.

WESTPAC

COMMONWEALTH BANK OF AUSTRALIA (Aa3/AA–/ AA–) took advantage of a hot post-UK election sterling market with last Tuesday's debut Sonia-linked covered bond sale, only the second such issuance from an Australian lender. The £1bn (US$1.31bn) five-year covered floating-rate note attracted an order book in excess of £1.7bn which enabled joint bookrunners Barclays, CBA, Deutsche Bank and HSBC to price inside 60bp area initial guidance at Sonia plus 55bp. The note came flat to a £1bn five-year from the UK's Nationwide Building Society that priced at 55bp last Friday, implying CBA paid no new issue concession. "Sterling covereds are the gift that keep on giving," said a banker at one of the leads. Relative pricing compares favourably to Australia and New Zealand Banking Group's Sonia-linked covered bond on January 11 2019, the first by a non-UK issuer, a £750m threeyear FRN which priced with a 68bp margin. This represented a generous 8bp pick-up over UK bank Lloyds which paid 60bp over Sonia for a £750m three-year covered four days earlier. At that time Aussie bank covered

Such demand enabled joint bookrunners Citigroup, HSBC, JP Morgan, RBC Capital Markets, TD Securities and Westpac to price

bonds typically priced 2bp–3bp back of UK names in Libor-linked format. Sonia was established in 2018 to replace the London interbank offered rate that will be discontinued next year. CBA, which previously accessed the Sonia market on December 3 2018 with a £125m senior unsecured one-year note, has been a leader in the establishment of an Australian risk-free reference rate, through the Reserve Bank of Australia's overnight cash rate or Aonia. In December CBA sold the first Aonialinked securitisation, the A$1.5bn (US$1.04bn) Medallion Trust Series 2019-1 prime RMBS, and plans to use Aonia for all its future RMBS. The use of Aonia reference rates is supported by the RBA as an alternative to the domestic Bank Bill Swap Rate (BBSW), the conventional reference point for Australian dollar floating-rate notes that includes a counterparty risk premium. Unlike Libor there are no plans to discontinue BBSW, which suggests BBSW and Aonia could co-exist as alternative, complementary interest rate reference points for capital market issuers. TOM REVELL, JOHN WEAVERS

the 2.0% three-year and 2.65% 10-year notes well inside 60bp area and 100bp area IPTs at Treasuries plus 42bp and 80bp. This translated into respective negative

Top lead managers of Australian dollarTop lead managers of all Australian debt, inc-

denominated domestic securitisation,

Top lead managers of all Australian securitisation,

ABS, MBS (ex-self-funded transactions) 1/1/19 – 31/12/19

inc-self-funded transactions ex-CDOs 1/1/19 – 31/12/19

inc-self-funded transactions ex-CDOs 1/1/19 – 31/12/19

Amount Name 1 ANZ

Amount

Issues

A$(m)

%

95

22,566.7

17.1

Name

Issues

A$(m)

Amount %

Name

Issues

1 NAB

37

7,542.8 20.2

1 NAB

38

A$(m)

%

7,921.7 20.3

2 Westpac

91

19,872.1

15.0

2 Westpac

25

7,445.1 20.0

2 Westpac

26

7,590.8

3 NAB

107

19,660.4

14.9

3 ANZ

16

5,197.6

13.9

3 ANZ

16

5,197.6

13.3

4 CBA

73

14,090.8

10.6

4 CBA

20

4,855.4

13.0

4 CBA

21

5,001.2

12.8

19.4

5 UBS

26

6,694.8

5.1

5 Macquarie

15

3,051.9

8.2

5 Macquarie

15

3,051.9

7.8

6 Deutsche

36

5,982.9

4.5

6 Deutsche

9

1,509.4

4.1

6 Deutsche

9

1,509.4

3.9

7 TD Sec

55

5,691.0

4.3

7 Standard Chartered

7

1,338.4

3.6

7 Standard Chartered

8

1,418.3

3.6

8 Nomura

53

5,284.9

4.0

8 Bank of America

5

1,203.8

3.2

8 Citigroup

5

1,241.0

3.2

9 RBC Capital

34

3,875.9

2.9

9 UOB

5

974.8

2.6

9 Bank of America

5

1,203.8

3.1

19

3,740.5

2.8

10 MUFG

3

806.4

2.2

10 UOB

5

974.8

2.5

51

37,309.5

Total

52

39,061.0

10 Macquarie Total

328

132,375.8

*Market volume and including Kangaroo bonds Proportional credit

Source: Refinitiv data

20

Total

*Market volume and including Kangaroo bonds

*Market volume and including Kangaroo bonds

Proportional credit

SDC Code: AJ3a

Source: Refinitiv data

Proportional credit

SDC Code: AJ5

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

Source: Refinitiv data

SDC Code: AJ4


COUNTRY REPORT AUSTRALIA

ANZ heads 2019 Aussie bond table Bonds NAB is number one ABS house again while Citigroup leads offshore Australia and New Zealand Banking Group retained top spot in the 2019 league table for Australian dollar bond issuance, according to Refinitiv data, having secured an 18.3% share of the A$94.9bn (US$66.1bn) market, excluding securitisations. ANZ was a lead manager on 79 of the 277 trades last year, ahead of Westpac, whose participation in 66 deals gave it a 13.1% market share. The other two domestic major banks, National Australia Bank and Commonwealth Bank of Australia, took third and fourth places with 12.7% and 9.7% shares from 70 and 53 tickets, respectively. UBS was the best-placed international bank with 26 trades and a 7.1% market share with SSA Kangaroo-focused TD Securities, Nomura, Deutsche Bank, RBC Capital Markets and HSBC rounding off Australia's top 10.

new issue concessions of 2bp and 4bp versus Westpac’s outstanding 2.75% January 2023 and 3.4% January 2028 lines. A three-year floating-rate priced at threemonth Libor plus 39bp. Westpac also accessed the 144A/Reg S covered bond market, using the same bookrunners minus JP Morgan, with a chunky US$1.75bn 2.0% five-year print, rated Aaa/AAA (Moody’s/Fitch), at Treasuries plus 39.3bp, versus 45bp area initial guidance. One participating bookrunner said such strong results, following on from NAB’s Top lead managers of Australian dollar-

NAB HEADS ABS MARKET

Perennial frontrunner NAB topped the Australian domestic securitisation league table again having been on 37 of the market's 51 trades for A$7.5bn, amounting to a 20.2% share of A$37.3bn ABS issuance. Westpac came a close second with A$7.4bn from 25 tickets and a 20.0% share, a large proportion of which came from its self-led A$3bn WST 2019-1 Trust RMBS in February. Similarly, ANZ's self-led A$1.5bn Kingfisher RMBS elevated it to third spot in the securitisation arena with a 13.9% share from 16 trades. CBA was fourth with a 13% market share from 20 trades, including the inaugural A$1.5bn AONIA-linked Medallion RMBS, while fellow Aussie bookrunner Macquarie was fifth with an 8.2% share from 15 transactions.

Name

Issues

A$(m)

Citigroup headed the offshore league table having been on 26 of 96 foreign currency tickets for a 11.2% share of last year's US$45.3bn market. HSBC helped 29 Australian issuers access public overseas markets for a 10.7% share and second place. Next came JP Morgan, Bank of America and Goldman Sachs with 8.0%, 7.3% and 5.8% of 2019 bond business, respectively. UBS, RBC Capital Markets, BNP Paribas, Westpac and CBA held the 6th to 10th positions. JOHN WEAVERS

A A$100m floating-rate note priced 135bp wide of three-month BBSW. ANZ, BNP Paribas, Nomura and Westpac were active bookrunners and CBA and NAB passive bookrunners for the Reg S notes, which have expected ratings of Baa1/A–/A+.

› BNP PARIBAS SNP NETS A$300M

› OCBC SYDNEY TAPS FOR A$150M

BNP PARIBAS (Aa3/A+/AA–) raised A$300m last Friday from a dual-tranche 7.5-year senior non-preferred EMTN sale. A A$200m 2.5% fixed-rate note priced at par, inside initial 140bp–145bp area and revised 145bp area guidance at asset swaps plus 135bp.

OVERSEA-CHINESE BANKING CORP (Aa1/AA–/AA–), Sydney branch, priced a A$150m increase to its May 23 2022 senior unsecured floating-rate note last Wednesday, taking the outstanding amount up to A$700m.

Amount Name

Amount Name

Deals

Top bookrunners of Australian equity and convertible offerings 1/1/19 – 31/12/19

Top bookrunners of Australia syndicated loans 1/1/19 – 31/12/19 %

CITIGROUP TOPS OFFSHORE TABLE

trailblazing trade three days earlier, reflected a red hot US dollar market, record weekly fund inflows of US$8.2bn, according to Lipper, and some scarcity value due to Australian banks’ lower annual issuance targets.

denominated domestic bonds, inc-Kangaroo bonds, ex-self-funded transactions, ABS, MBS 1/1/19 – 31/12/19 Amount

The best-placed international bookrunners were Deutsche Bank, Standard Chartered, Bank of America, United Overseas Bank and Mitsubishi in that order.

US$(m)

%

Issues

US$(m)

%

40

8,424.8

25.1

1 UBS

1 ANZ

79

17,369.1

18.3

1 ANZ

39

7,509.2

15.0

2 JP Morgan

26

4,269.8

12.7

2 Westpac

66

12,386.7

13.1

2 NAB

27

5,696.8

11.4

3 Macquarie

26

3,440.7

10.3 9.4

3 NAB

70

12,077.3

12.7

3 CBA

27

5,239.6

10.5

4 Citigroup

12

3,149.7

4 CBA

53

9,195.0

9.7

4 HSBC

19

5,187.7

10.4

5 Bell Financial

76

1,770.4

5.3

5 UBS

26

6,694.8

7.1

5 MUFG

19

4,189.4

8.4

6 Morgan Stanley

8

1,447.8

4.3

6 TD Sec

55

5,691.0

6.0

6 Westpac

18

4,097.4

8.2

7 Goldman Sachs

9

1,254.8

3.7

7 Nomura

53

5,284.9

5.6

7 SMFG

14

2,821.8

5.6

8 Canaccord Financial Inc

93

1,112.2

3.3

8 Deutsche

27

4,473.5

4.7

8 Mizuho

11

2,362.6

4.7

9 Bank of America

4

807.7

2.4

9 RBC Capital

32

3,283.3

3.5

9 Bank of China

10

2,143.8

4.3

7

761.2

2.3

10 HSBC

18

2,722.1

2.9

7

1,412.5

2.8

Total

277

94,904.9

10 BNP Paribas Total

122

50,101.3

10 RBC Capital Total

* Based on market of syndication and market total

“Standard Exclusion not applicable”

Proportional credit

Proportional credit

Proportional credit

SDC Code: AJ6

Source: Refinitiv data

SDC Code: S7

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

33,536.3

*Market volume

*Market volume and including Kangaroo bonds

Source: Refinitiv data

749

Source: Refinitiv data

SDC Code: AK1

21


ANZ confirms flatter Aussie curve Bonds Demand deepens for longer-dated bonds that offer more yield AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND BANKING GROUP

(Aa3/AA–/AA–) reopened the local bond market last Tuesday with a self-led A$3.5bn (US$2.42bn) three-part MTN issue that underlined the flattening of the domestic curve. A A$1.1bn three-year floating-rate note priced 1bp inside 63bp area guidance at three-month BBSW plus 62bp. A A$1.9bn five-year FRN printed at threemonth BBSW plus 76bp, a full 4bp tighter than 80bp area guidance, while a A$500m 1.65% fixed-rate five-year note priced at 99.833 to yield 1.685%, 76bp wide of asset swaps. In comparison ANZ issued a A$1.2bn three-year FRN at three-month BBSW plus 58bp on August 22, alongside a A$1.35bn five-year floater and a A$450m five-year fixed-rate MTN at 77bp over three-month BBSW and asset swaps. Further back, on January 30 last year,

The reopening via sole lead manager Westpac priced at 100.105, 57.5bp wide of three-month BBSW. OCBC Sydney raised A$550m from the initial three-year sale on May 15 2019. This priced at three-month BBSW plus 62bp, in line with the then clearing rate for Australian major bank three-year notes.

TREASURY CORPORATION OF VICTORIA, rated Aaa/ AAA (Moody’s/S&P), has mandated Bank of America and NAB as joint lead managers for

Top bookrunners of Australian equity 1/1/19 – 31/12/19 Amount Issues

1 UBS

40

2 JP Morgan

25

US$(m)

%

8,424.8 25.5 4,128.1

12.5 10.4

3 Macquarie

26

3,440.7

4 Citigroup

11

3,008.0

9.1

5 Bell Financial

76

1,770.4

5.4

6 Morgan Stanley

8

1,447.8

4.4

7 Goldman Sachs

9

1,254.8

3.8

8 Canaccord Financial Inc

92

1,096.8

3.3

761.2

2.3

735.4

2.2

9 RBC Capital 10 Moelis & Co Total

7 16 735

33,008.0

*Market volume

“Standard Exclusion not applicable” Proportional credit

Source: Refinitiv data

22

a new November 20 2023 bond offering with an indicative coupon of 1.0%.

SYNDICATED LOANS › BLACKSTONE PREPS FEBRUARY REFI is preparing to launch in February a financing of around A$1.8bn (US$1.23bn) that will refinance loans it raised in 2016 and 2017 for property acquisitions. The new facility will have a five-year tenor and will offer an interest margin of around 175bp over BBSY. HSBC, National Australia Bank and United Overseas Bank are arranging the new facility. Proceeds will refinance a A$432m fouryear loan and A$569m four-year facility, both completed in 2016, and a A$715m four-year loan signed in November 2017. The 2016 loans financed the acquisition of portfolios of industrial properties, while the 2017 borrowing funded the purchase of logistic property assets from Goodman Group. Gallant Finance is the borrower on the A$432m loan, which is split into a A$416m term loan and a A$16m revolver, and offered a top-level all-in of 213.8bp based on an interest margin of 200bp over BBSY. ANZ and HSBC were the underwriters. Gallop Finance is the borrower on the

BLACKSTONE GROUP

› VICTORIA READIES 2023 BOND LINE

Name

the Aussie major sold a A$1.5bn three-year FRN at 88bp plus three-month BBSW with a A$2.2bn five-year FRN and a A$400m fixedrate five-year at clearing margins of 110bp. “Historically low yields and credit spreads have led investors to increasingly look for opportunities for higher returns which has in turn prompted flatter yield curves,” said Paul White, global head of syndication at ANZ. This flattening is reflected in the major bank three to five-year domestic credit spread which has fallen from 22bp last January to 19bp in August and just 14bp with the latest trade. White emphasised the higher-than-normal demand for the fixed five-year note, in excess of A$625m, as real money accounts lock in these yield levels. The prospect of any near-term spike in yields seems remote with the Reserve Bank of Australia expected to cut its official cash rate to a new all-time low next month while

SDC Code: AK2

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

it considers adding quantitative easing to its policy tool box. Overall demand for the latest ANZ threetrancher exceeded A$4.5bn at reoffer pricing levels. Australian and New Zealand investors bought 94% of the three-year with Asia taking 6%. Banks were allotted 52%, asset managers and insurance companies 39%, official institutions 8% and others 1%. Antipodean accounts took 69% of the five-year FRN and 86% of the fixed-rate offering with Asia allocated 31% and 14%, respectively. Banks, asset managers/insurance companies, official institutions and others picked up 54%, 41%, 3% and 2% of the five-year floater, while asset managers and insurance dominated the fixed-rate note with a 81% share. Banks took 15% and official institutions and others 2% each. JOHN WEAVERS

A$569m borrowing, which comprises a A$524m term loan and a A$45m revolver, according to Refinitiv LPC data. HSBC, NAB and UOB were the underwriters. Deutsche Bank and UOB were underwriters of the A$715m loan, which comprises term loans of A$326m and A$239m, and multi-option revolving credit facilities of A$100m and A$50m. The term loan tranches paid opening margins of 200bp over BBSY, while the revolver portions offered 100bp over BBSY with a line fee. (A Blackstone-led consortium owns 55% of Refinitiv, the parent company of LPC and IFR.)

› BANKS PILE INTO QUEEN’S WHARF LOAN Fifteen banks have joined a A$1.6bn 5.5-year loan backing Queen’s Wharf Brisbane’s integrated resort project. Australia’s STAR ENTERTAINMENT GROUP, FAR EAST CONSORTIUM INTERNATIONAL and Hong Kong’s CHOW TAI FOOK ENTERPRISES are the borrowers of the financing, which is split into a A$363m tranche A, A$437m tranche B, and A$800m tranche C. The term facility offers an interest margin of around 200bp over BBSY during the construction period and around 180bp over BBSY afterwards. Macquarie is the adviser on the financing.


COUNTRY REPORT AUSTRALIA

Brookfield aims wide for LBO Loans Borrowing adds one more ticket level after attracting eight banks Brookfield Property Group is targeting a wider group of lenders for a A$1.0415bn (US$730m) loan backing its acquisition of Australian retirement village operator Aveo Group after attracting eight lenders in the first phase of general syndication. The second phase of syndication for the five-year senior secured loan has added a ticket level of less than A$50m from banks joining as arrangers for 37.5bp in fees. Lead arrangers committing A$75m–$100m earn 75bp, while co-arrangers taking A$50m–$75m are offered 50bp. These two ticket levels were also sought in the first phase. Bank presentations are scheduled in Taipei on January 15 and Seoul on January 16. Bank of Baroda, Bank of Queensland, China Everbright Bank, Commonwealth Bank of Australia, Eastspring Investments, First Commercial Bank, Metrics Credit Partners and National Australia Bank joined in the first phase of syndication, which was launched in October at three levels. Mandated lead arrangers committing A$100m and above were offered a top-level

Destination Brisbane Consortium is developing the A$3.6bn project, which will cover more than 26 hectares across land and water in Brisbane, Queensland. It is slated to open in 2022. The non-heritage buildings that once occupied the space have been demolished. A shoring system has been installed around the future integrated resort development basement, and all excavation materials have been removed. In addition, maritime work has now commenced in the Brisbane River for the construction of the piled suspended concrete slab, which will eventually provide 6,500 square metres of new public space. For full allocations, see www.ifre.com.

› LENDLEASE SIGNS CIRCULAR QUAY LBO has raised a A$990m selfarranged five-year club loan from 10 banks to back the development of an office tower in Sydney.Bank of China, Commonwealth Bank of Australia, DBS Bank, HSBC, ICBC, MUFG Bank, Mizuho Bank, OCBC Bank, Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp and United Overseas Bank provided the loan. The 53-storey Circular Quay Tower at

LENDLEASE GROUP

fee of 100bp. ANZ, Bank of China and Barclays are MLAs, bookrunners and underwriters of the deal, which comprises a A$787.5m term loan cash advance facility (Facility A), A$154m revolving facility (Facility B) and a A$100m revolving working capital facility (Facility C). Only facilities A and B are being syndicated and offer interest margins of 250bp over BBSY. Facility A will be used for funding the acquisition and associated costs and for refinancing Aveo's existing debt. Facility B will go towards current construction projects and, along with Facility C, may also be made available to certain units of Aveo. HYDRA RL BIDCO, an entity controlled by Canadian investment firm Brookfield Asset Management on behalf of its managed funds, implemented a scheme of arrangement on November 28 relating to the acquisition of Aveo. The retirement village operator was delisted from the Australian Securities Exchange at the close of trading on December 2. MARIKO ISHIKAWA

180 George Street forms part of the broader renewal project at Circular Quay, which Lendlease is developing in partnership with China’s Ping An Real Estate and Japan’s Mitsubishi Estate Asia. In May, Lendlease closed a A$960m five-year loan that was increased from A$500m following commitments from 14 banks in syndication. HSBC, National Australia Bank, Mizuho Bank and SMBC were the mandated lead arrangers, bookrunners and underwriters of the new-money deal comprising a A$725m five-year term loan and a A$235m fiveyear revolving facility paying interest margins of 160bp and 165bp over BBSY, respectively. Last month, Singapore-listed Lendlease Global Commercial REIT closed a US$383mequivalent bullet facility after attracting five lenders in syndication. Citigroup, CBA and DBS Bank were the MLABs of the loan, which comprises a S$99m (US$72m) three-year tranche and a €285m (US$312m) four-year piece. Lendlease Corp, part of Australia-listed Lendlease Group, is the sponsor of the REIT, which comprises two assets – 313 Somerset in Singapore (retail) and the Sky Complex (office) in Milan, Italy. International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

› AMA LOAN SET FOR SUNCORP UNITS BUY has obtained a A$375m multitranche facility backing its acquisition of units of Suncorp Group. ANZ and National Australia Bank have underwritten the facility, which is split into a A$142.5m three-year bullet term loan (tranche A), a A$147.5m five-year bullet term loan (tranche B), a A$50m threeyear revolving credit facility for capital expenditure and acquisition (tranche C) and a A$35m five-year multi-option working capital facility available in Australian and US dollars (tranche D). Bank of China, Bendigo and Adelaide Bank, First Commercial Bank, Metrics Credit Partners and Westpac Banking Corp joined in syndication. The interest margin is based on the following net leverage ratio grid. AMA signed a binding agreement to acquire 90% of Suncorp’s smash repair business, Capital Smart Repairs Australia, based on an implied enterprise value of A$420m, and 100% of auto parts business ACM Parts for A$20m. Capital Smart specialises in low to medium severity repairs in metropolitan areas in Australia and New Zealand, while ACM is an automotive parts supplier to the motor repair industry and general public. In an October 31 filing, AMA announced the completion of the acquisition. Earlier the same month, it said it planned to draw down A$199m of the new senior loan of around A$375m to fund the acquisition and a further A$91m to refinance existing debt at the time of completion. AMA also said it has planned a fully underwritten equity raising of around A$216m to finance the acquisition. ASX-listed AMA is a leading provider of automotive aftercare services and accessories market, according to its website. For full allocations, see www.ifre.com.

AMA GROUP

› SEEK COMPLETES A&E OF 2018 LOAN Australian recruitment firm SEEK has completed an amendment and extension of a multi-tranche dual-currency facility from 2018. The new borrowing comprises revolving credit facilities of A$362.5m due 2022 (tranche A), A$250m due 2023 (tranche B), US$252.5m due 2024 (tranche C), as well as term loans of US$100m due 2023 (tranche D) and US$200m due 2024 (tranche E). HSBC and National Australia Bank were the mandated lead arrangers and bookrunners. The interest margins on the latest financing, which are based on a net leverage grid, are 5bp–10bp tighter than the 2018 facility. 23


Agricultural Bank of China, ANZ Bank, BNP Paribas, Bank of China Sydney and Hong Kong branches, Bank of Taiwan, China Merchants Bank, Commonwealth Bank of Australia, DBS Bank, First Commercial Bank, Mega International Commercial Bank, MUFG Bank, Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp, Taipei Fubon Commercial Bank, Taiwan Business Bank, Taiwan Cooperative Bank, United Overseas Bank, and Westpac Banking Corp participated in the latest A&E exercise. The original 2018 facility was split into a A$375m three-year revolver (tranche A), a A$250m four-year revolver (tranche B), a US$275m five-year revolver (tranche C), a US$100m four-year term loan (tranche D) and a US$200m five-year term loan (tranche E). The facilities offered margins of 140bp and 155bp over BBSY for tranches A and B, and 165bp, 155bp and 165bp over Libor for tranches C, D and E, respectively. In June 2017, the company closed a A$917m dual-currency refinancing split into a A$190m 25-month tranche, a A$360m 37-month piece and a US$275m 49-month portion paying margins of 190bp and 205bp over BBSY, and 220bp over Libor, respectively. The company in December issued a A$150m 6.5-year non-call 3.5-year note, its second unrated bond, which priced inside 375bp area guidance at three-month BBSW plus 370bp. The bond includes a 200bp margin step-up if not called on June 20 2023.

EQUITY CAPITAL MARKETS › KILCOY GLOBAL FOODS PREPARES HK IPO Australian meat processor and exporter KILCOY GLOBAL FOODS is preparing an IPO of about US$300m in Hong Kong, people close to the deal have said. The company, controlled by Chinese conglomerate New Hope Group, filed to the Stock Exchange of Hong Kong on January 2. It specialises in premium beef and other protein products, including cooked lamb, pork and poultry. Some of its major markets are China, Japan, the US and South Korea. In 2013, New Hope paid nearly US$100m for a controlling stake in the then Kilcoy Pastoral Company through its investment arm Hosen Capital. Kilcoy has since expanded by acquiring processing business Ruprecht in the US and Weidao Food in China and renamed the business in 2015 as Kilcoy Global Foods. Its Queensland-based facility has a

24

production capacity of 230,000 tonnes of beef annually. For the nine months ended September 30, the company posted a profit of US$25.4m, up from US$2m the year before. It had an annual profit of US$11.6m in 2018. Citigroup and CMB International are the joint sponsors.

managers took 60%, insurance companies 37% and private banks and banks 3%. The senior notes have expected ratings of Baa2/BBB (Moody’s/S&P), on par with the issuer. Proceeds will be used for general corporate purposes and refinancing. Bank of America and UBS were joint lead managers and bookrunners, with HSBC as joint lead manager.

› COGARD REACHES A BILLION DOLLARS

CHINA

raised US$1bn from a two-tranche bond on January 7. China’s largest residential property developer priced a US$550m seven-year non-call four at 5.125% and a US$450m 10-year non-call five at 5.625%, both 50bp inside initial guidance. Both tranches priced at par. Yeung Kwok Keung, Country Garden’s chairman, bought US$80m of thebonds. Chief executive Mo Bin also subscribed for US$2m of each tranche, according to stock exchange filings. The Reg S deal is rated BBB– by Fitch, on par with the issuer. The Chinese property developer is also rated Ba1/BB+ by Moody’s and S&P. Proceeds will be used for refinancing existing medium to long-term offshore debt due within the next 12 months. Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs were joint global coordinators as well as lead managers and bookrunners with Standard Chartered Bank.

COUNTRY GARDEN HOLDINGS

DEBT CAPITAL MARKETS › JD.COM GOES LONG ON REVERSE ENQUIRY Chinese e-commerce company JD.COM has raised US$1bn from dual-tranche SECregistered bonds. A US$700m 3.375% 10-year tranche was priced at 99.68 to yield 3.413% on January 7, or Treasuries plus 160bp, inside initial guidance of 195bp area. A US$300m 4.125% 30-year tranche was priced at 98.98 to yield 4.185%, in line with final price guidance. The 30-year tranche was added on the back of reverse enquiries after the initial 10-year deal was announced. The 10-year tranche attracted orders of over US$4bn at final pricing from 201 accounts. Asia took 52% of the bonds, EMEA 20% and the US 28%. By investor type, asset managers took 70%, public institutions 5%, private banks and banks 10% and insurance companies 15%. The 30-year tranche received orders of over US$1.3bn at final pricing from 90 accounts. Investors from the US took the largest share at 47%, followed by Asia at 33% and EMEA at 20%. By investor type, asset

BANK OF CHINA, rated A1/A/A, last Thursday raised US$2.49bn-equivalent in US dollars and euros from a triple-tranche Reg S offering that priced at the tight ends of final guidance.

Top bookrunners of Dim Sum bonds

Top bookrunners of all renminbi bonds,

(Rmb issued and settled offshore bonds) 1/1/19 – 31/12/19

ex-self-funded transactions 1/1/19 – 31/12/19

› BANK OF CHINA SEES TRIPLE

Amount

Amount

Name

Issues

Rmb(m)

%

1 BoCom

9

26,179.1

27.6

2 HSBC

78

20,481.6

3 Bank of China

9

11,981.1

4 Standard Chartered

22

7,330.2

7.7

Name

Issues

Rmb(m)

%

1 Bank of China

1,477

1,060,210.1

9.1

21.6

2 ICBC

1,405

936,560.9

8.0

12.6

3 CCB

1,428

825,420.6

7.1

4 Citic

1,085

710,364.8

6.1 6.0

5 Credit Agricole

12

4,518.1

4.8

5 BoCom

1,187

696,445.4

6 KGI Financial

6

1,631.1

1.7

6 ABC

1,010

620,290.5

5.3

7 CCB

6

1,564.4

1.7

7 CSC Financial

736

540,164.5

4.6

8 Citic

4

1,211.1

1.3

8 Industrial Bank

818

413,244.5

3.5

9 SPDB

4

1,088.2

1.2

9 China Merchants Bank 581

342,002.1

2.9

1,073.1

1.1

316,777.8

2.7

10 CTBC Financial Total

5 131

94,805.3

*Market volume

Total

456

5,254 11,706,359.8

*Market volume

Proportional credit

Source: Refinitiv data

10 Guotai Junan Sec

Proportional credit

SDC Code: AS24a

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

Source: Refinitiv data

SDC Code: AS24


COUNTRY REPORT CHINA

Shangrao LGFV revives dollar bond Bonds Higher yield and better timing overcome December setback

The leads did not disclose allocations by region, but the banker said significant orders came from foreign investors based in Singapore and Hong Kong, while some came from European investors. Banks took 48% of the deal, fund managers 43%, and 9% went to private banks and others. "The issuer is keen to bring in overseas investors, and not make it a deal bought just by domestic investors. I think it has achieved this target," the banker said.

Shangrao Investment was forced to postpone a three-year US dollar bond offering last month after the pricing was considered too tight, with investors conservative towards both new investments at the year-end and LGFVs because of negative news stories on the sector. The marketing of the Reg S deal began on December 10 at 4.25% area before final guidance of 4.00% area (+/-2bp) was announced that evening, when orders were said to be over US$1.25bn, including US$1bn from the leads. However, market orders and even orders from the leads dropped off because of the pricing. The leads tried to launch a US$200m deal at 3.98% but the remaining books could not fully cover it. Shangrao Investment Holdings International is the issuer and the stateowned parent group is the guarantor. The senior unsecured Reg S notes have an expected BBB– rating from Fitch, on par with the guarantor. The deal had 14 bookrunners, down from 18 at the last attempt. Proceeds will be used to finance existing projects, repay bank borrowings and for general corporate purposes. Shangrao Investment is a primary investment and financing entity for the Shangrao municipal government in Jiangxi province. It invests in and operates key business segments and assets, including urban development and infrastructure construction, water supply and sewage, toll roads, public transportation and airport operation, and tourism and financial services, according to Fitch. The group is not a first-time issuer in the

A US$1bn two-year floating-rate note was set at three-month Libor plus 58bp and a US$600m five-year fixed-rate bond at Treasuries plus 78bp. Final price guidance was at three-month Libor plus 58bp–60bp and Treasuries plus 78bp–80bp, respectively, tightened from initial guidance of 85bp area and 110bp area. The two-year FRN received orders of over US$3.6bn from 94 accounts. Banks bought 83% of the deal, asset managers 9% and central banks, sovereigns and others 8%. Asia accounted for 85%, Europe 14% and offshore US 1%. The five-year bond received over US$1.9bn of orders from 58 accounts. Banks took 88%, asset managers 6% and central

banks, sovereigns and others 6%. Asia accounted for 92% and Europe 8%. An €800m (US$889m) three-year bond priced at mid-swaps plus 47bp, inside final guidance of 50bp and initial guidance of 70bp–75bp area. Bank of China’s Luxembourg branch is the issuer of the euro tranche, which will pay a coupon of 0.125%. No distribution details were released yet but orders were over €2.35bn. Settlement for all the notes will be on January 16. Proceeds will be used for general corporate purposes. Bank of China, Credit Agricole and JP Morgan were joint global coordinators as well as lead managers and bookrunners

SHANGRAO INVESTMENT HOLDING GROUP, a Chinese local government financing vehicle rated BBB– by Fitch, has successfully revived a US dollar bond offering following a failed attempt last month, returning with a more generous yield and strong anchor orders in a better issuance window. Shangrao Investment on January 9 priced a US$500m three-year bond at par to yield 4.30%, inside initial 4.70% area guidance. Having failed to print a US$200m deal at 3.98% last month, the revamped offer came with a yield 32bp higher and a bigger size. "The timing is much better this time as money available for investment is much more abundant than at year-end," a banker on the deal said. "Of course, the issuer's solid credit fundamentals also helped to garner significant anchor support." Orders reached over US$1.5bn after two hours of bookbuilding, and exceeded US$2.5bn by the time final guidance was released. The final book stood at over US$2.3bn from 73 accounts, including US$495m from the leads.

STRONG ANCHORS

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

offshore market, having issued a US$200m 5.70% three-year at 98.116 to yield 6.40% in February 2018. Those bonds were quoted at 99.50/100.00 ahead the announcement of the new issue, according to Refinitiv prices. The bonds are not liquid and the leads did not use them as a comparable. The leads instead used similarly rated Jiangxi Provincial Water Conservancy Investment's 3.4% 2022s, rated Baa3/BBB (Moody's/Fitch), and Qingdao West Coast Development Group's 3.9% 2022s, rated Baa3/BBB– (Moody's/Fitch), as comparables. They were bid at 3.5% and 3.95% before the release of IPG, respectively. The banker, however, said the pricing of Shangrao Investment's new issue was not particularly generous and was in a reasonable range based on the market response. "There are many BBB– rated LGFV bonds trading in the 4.2%–4.3% range, but I think the choice of comparables that make a new issue seem more attractive is a common tactic," he said. China Citic Bank International, CNCB Capital, GF Securities and Central Wealth Securities Investment were joint global coordinators on the transaction. They were also joint bookrunners and joint lead managers with China Securities International, Guotai Junan International, Standard Chartered Bank, China Everbright Bank Hong Kong branch, Industrial Bank Hong Kong branch, Orient Securities (Hong Kong), Haitong Bank, ABC International, Zhongtai International and CMBC Capital. CAROL CHAN

with Scotiabank, Commonwealth Bank of Australia, MUFG, Bank of Communications, China Everbright Bank Hong Kong branch and ABC International for the US dollar deals issued through the bank’s Hong Kong branch. Bank of China, Credit Agricole and BNP Paribas were the joint global coordinators as well as lead managers and bookrunners with Commerzbank, ING and DZ Bank for the euro issue.

› CDB PLANS GBP BONDS CHINA DEVELOPMENT BANK,

rated A1/A+ (Moody’s/ S&P), has hired banks for a proposed offering of GBP-denominated benchmark 25


Panda Green extends deadline Bonds Company buys time to complete rescue investment Chinese solar power company PANDA GREEN ENERGY GROUP has extended the deadline for an exchange offer for its outstanding US$350m 8.25% senior bonds due January 25 2020. The offer is a back-up plan in case a proposed investment by state-owned BEIJING ENERGY HOLDINGS, which would become the company's largest shareholder, does not happen in time to repay the bonds. Panda Green announced a par-for-par exchange offer for its US dollar bonds, inviting holders to swap for new notes with a coupon of 8% and a tenor of two years. The deadline was originally December 27, but it has been extended to January 14. CMB International is dealer manager and CLSA is financial adviser, while DF King is information and exchange agent. Panda Green said the exchange offer would improve its debt structure and extend its debt maturity profile, strengthen its balance sheet and improve cashflow management.

Reg S senior unsecured notes due in 2023, subject to market conditions. Agricultural Bank of China Hong Kong branch, Bank of China, Bank of Communications, Barclays, CCB (Europe), Credit Agricole, Deutsche Bank, HSBC, ICBC and Mizuho Securities are joint lead managers and joint bookrunners. The Chinese policy bank started holding investor calls on January 9. The notes will be issued off its US$30bn debt issuance programme and are expected to be rated A1 by Moody’s. Industrial and Commercial Bank London branch in July issued three-year GBP600m senior unsecured bonds, which marked the first GBP-denominated public bond offering by a Chinese bank.

› CENTRAL PLAZA DEVELOPMENT PRINTS

The Hong Kong-listed company on November 19 entered into an agreement to sell 7.2bn new shares to a subsidiary of Beijing Energy for HK$1.8bn (US$230m) in cash. On completion, Beijing Energy would own 32% of the company's enlarged share capital and become the largest shareholder. Moreover, Beijing Energy will also provide a Rmb8bn–Rmb10bn credit enhancement guarantee to Panda Green to help the company reduce its financing costs. The investment, which had been expected to close by January 6 2020, is subject to approval from Panda Green's independent shareholders and various regulators, including the Beijing State-Owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission and Beijing Development and Reform Commission. Rating agencies expect the introduction of Beijing Energy to strengthen Panda Green's credit profile and support its ability to repay the maturing 8.25% 2020s. The company also has Rmb1.8bn of onshore notes due in the second half of 2020.

a subsidiary of Beijing Capital Land, is the guarantor of the senior unsecured notes. Beijing Capital Group is providing a keepwell and equity interest purchase undertaking. Beijing Capital Group is rated Baa3/BBB–/ BBB, while the bond has an expected rating of BBB from Fitch. Proceeds will be used for refinancing mid-term or long-term offshore debt, which is due within one year. China Citic Bank International, Guotai Junan International and HSBC were joint global coordinators as well as lead managers and bookrunners with Haitong International, CMB International, China International Capital Corporation, ICBC International, Bank of Communications, CLSA, Nomura, China Securities International and Silk Road International.

› CHINA FORTUNE LAND REFINANCES

priced a US$450m 5.5-year bond at par to yield 3.85% on January 7. The Reg S deal priced inside initial guidance of 4.25% area after receiving orders of over US$2.8bn, including US$727.5m from the lead managers. Asian investors took 96% of the deal and the rest went to Europe. By investor type, fund managers took 55%, banks 33%, corporations and others 6% and private banks 6%. International Financial Center Property,

CHINA FORTUNE LAND DEVELOPMENT has raised US$1.2bn from a dual-tranche offering of Reg S senior bonds. A US$500m three-year note priced at par on January 8 to yield 6.9%, inside initial guidance of 7.25% area. The issue received orders of over US$2.8bn from 133 accounts, including US$585m from lead managers. Asian investors took 87% and the rest

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International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

CENTRAL PLAZA DEVELOPMENT

S&P on December 18 cut Panda Green's rating to CC from CCC+, and lowered the bonds to CC from CCC. It said the bond exchange would constitute a distressed exchange even though there is no haircut because holders will face a deferred maturity and lower interest rate for the new notes. If Panda Green fails to complete the agreement with Beijing Energy by March 31 2020, it will be obligated to redeem the new notes at par value before the first coupon date in July, wrote S&P. Moody's rates Panda Green Caa1 and the 8.25% 2020s Caa2. It affirmed its ratings on December 18, but said they remain under review and could be raised or lowered. The rating agency said Panda Green's ratings could improve if the exchange offer went through and the Beijing Energy investment proceeded, but also said the exchange offer constituted a distressed debt exchange, which it considers a default event. DANIEL STANTON

went to Europe. Banks took 42%, followed by asset managers and hedge funds at 39%, private banks 11% and others 8%. A US$700m five-year note priced at par to yield 8.05%, inside initial guidance of 8.50% area. The issue received orders of over US$2.5bn from 109 accounts, including US$685m from lead managers. Asian investors took 94% of the bonds, with the remainder going to Europe. Asset managers and hedge funds took 37%, banks 33%, private banks 19% and others 11%. Both tranches have an expected rating of Ba3 by Moody’s. There is a change of control put option at 101%. CFLD (Cayman) Investment is the issuer and China Fortune Land Development is the guarantor of the notes. Proceeds will be used to refinance offshore debt due within a year. Haitong International, JP Morgan, China Citic Bank International, Guotai Junan International, CMB International,ICBC International and UBS were joint global coordinators as well as bookrunners and lead managers with Bank of China, Barclays, BOC International, CCB International, Central Wealth Securities Investment, China International Capital Corporation, China Investment Securities International, CLSA, Credit Suisse, HSBC, Orient


COUNTRY REPORT CHINA

Securities (Hong Kong) and Zhongtai International.

› CHINA MERCHANTS HK SETS UP MTN has set up a US$5bn medium-term note programme with Standard Chartered Bank as arranger. Future Days is the issuer under the programme and China Merchants Holdings is the guarantor. The dealers are Bank of China (Hong Kong), Barclays, BNP Paribas, Bank of America, DBS Bank, Deutsche Bank, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, HSBC, ING, JP Morgan, Standard Chartered and UBS. The programme is listed on the Stock Exchange of Hong Kong.

CHINA MERCHANTS HOLDINGS (HONG KONG)

› CHINA SCE GROUP TAPS 2024S CHINA SCE GROUP HOLDINGS reopened its 7.375% bond due April 2024 for a further US$150m on January 7, taking the total outstanding to US$500m. The tap was capped at US$150m and priced at 103.181 to yield 6.5%, inside initial guidance of 6.875% area. The bonds are rated B2/B (Moody’s/S&P). The new notes will settle on January 14. HSBC and UBS were joint global coordinators, bookrunners and lead managers.

› CHINA ZHENGTONG AUTO MARKETS DEAL CHINA ZHENGTONG AUTO SERVICES HOLDINGS last Friday was marketing two-year US dollar senior bonds at final price guidance of 12%. The bonds have an expected B2 rating from Moody’s, on par with the issuer. The Reg S issue has not been priced at the time of writing. The Chinese luxury car dealership group plans to use proceeds for debt refinancing, general corporate purposes and working capital. JP Morgan is the sole global coordinator, lead manager and bookrunner.

› CIFI HOLDINGS REFINANCES CIFI HOLDINGS, rated Ba3/BB/BB, priced US$400m 5.5-year non-call three bonds on January 7 at par to yield 6%. The Reg S deal priced well inside initial guidance of 6.5% area after attracting orders of over US$1.4bn, including US$520m from the lead managers. Over 70 investors participated. Asian investors took 86% of the deal, with the remainder going to Europe. Funds and asset managers took 45%, bank treasury 28%, private banks 24% and others 3%. The senior fixed-rate notes come with

expected ratings of BB–/BB (S&P/Fitch). CIFI’s first call option is on January 16 2023 and the final maturity is July 16 2025. Proceeds will be used for debt refinancing. HSBC, Barclays, BoCom International, BOSC International, China Citic Bank International, Credit Suisse, Goldman Sachs, Haitong International, JP Morgan and Standard Chartered Bank were joint global coordinators, bookrunners and lead managers.

› CMS MULLS THREE-YEAR DOLLAR ISSUE CHINA MERCHANTS SECURITIES is considering launching a benchmark-sized Reg S threeyear US dollar senior unsecured notes offering as early as Monday, according an investor update. The Chinese brokerage concluded investor meetings in Hong Kong last week. China Merchants Securities (HK), CMB International, CMB Wing Lung Bank, DBS Bank, HSBC and ICBC International are joint global coordinators, joint lead managers and joint bookrunners on the deal. The proposed notes are expected to be rated Baa1 by Moody’s, on par with the issuer.

› FANTASIA RAISES MONEY FOR TENDER Chinese property developer FANTASIA rated B2/B/B+, has raised US$450m from a new bond issue to fund a concurrent tender offer. The 10.875% three-year non-call two notes were priced at 99.191 to yield 11.2% on January 6, inside initial guidance of 11.625% area. The Reg S senior notes have expected ratings of B/B+ (S&P/Fitch). The deal drew final orders of over US$3.5bn from 217 accounts. Asia took 95% of the notes while Europe and Middle East got the rest. Fund managers and insurers got 82%, private banks 17% and banks 1%. Proceeds from the bond offering will be used to refinance certain debt, including the concurrent offer to purchase for cash of its US$600m 8.375% senior notes due 2021. Under the tender offer, Fantasia is offering to pay US$1,012 in cash per US$1,000 in principal amount. Deadline for the tender offer is January 14. The company plans to announce on January 15 the maximum amount it will accept under the tender offer. UBS, Barclays, BNP Paribas, Deutsche Bank, Morgan Stanley and Nomura are joint global coordinators, joint lead managers and joint bookrunners on the new bond issuance. UBS and Barclays are dealer managers on

HOLDINGS GROUP,

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

the tender offer. DF King is tender agent.

› FUJIAN YANGO RAISES AN EXTRA US$26M FUJIAN YANGO GROUP reopened its 12.5% September 24 2021 senior bonds for US$26m, bringing the total outstanding to US$310m. The additional bonds were sold at 99.197 to yield 13%, in line with price guidance. Yango (Cayman) Investment is the issuer and Fujian Yango Group, rated B/BB– (S&P/ Lianhe Global), is the parent guarantor. The bonds are rated B–/BB– (S&P/Lianhe). Haitong International and CCB International were joint global coordinators and bookrunners. Fujian Yango Group has businesses in property development, education services, commodities trading and environmental services, and also has investments in financial services companies.

› GOLDEN WHEEL ROLLS OUT 13% YIELD GOLDEN WHEEL TIANDI HOLDINGS, rated B2/B (Moody’s/Fitch), last Monday raised US$200m from two-year two-month bonds priced at 99.943 to yield 13%, inside initial guidance of 13.25% area. The notes, rated B2 by Moody’s, pay a coupon of 12.95% and will settle on January 14. There will be a change of control put option at 101%. BOC International, Guotai Junan International, Haitong International, HSBC and CLSA were joint global coordinators for the new Reg S issue. They were also joint bookrunners alongside HeungKong Financial and Orient Securities (Hong Kong). Proceeds will be used to refinance debt, including payments to be made under a tender offer for existing notes of the Chinese commercial and residential property developer. Golden Wheel also announced that the maximum acceptance amount in the tender offer for the outstanding US$400m 7% 2021s is US$140m. It is offering to pay US$967.50 in cash per US$1,000 in principal amount for the senior notes due January 18 2021. The tender deadline is January 15. BOCI is dealer manager.

› HUACHEN FACES CHALLENGES Moody’s expects HUACHEN ENERGY will encounter more challenges in meeting its debt obligations over the coming months following its failure to make a coupon payment on US$500m 6.625% 2020 bonds after the grace period. The default on the interest payment is credit negative, the rating agency said in a press release on December 24. 27




The coupon was due November 18 with a 30-day grace period. In June, the privately owned Chinese power producer paid a coupon within two days of the expiry of the grace period. Moody’s said its Ca corporate family rating on Huachen reflects its expectation that holders of the dollar bonds may take legal action against the company following the default, including a demand for the immediate repayment of the principal and interest. The outlook on Huachen’s ratings remains negative because of the high level of uncertainty around the company’s ability to meet its short-term debt obligations. A default by Shanghai-listed parent company Wintime Energy in July 2018 has put significant stress on Huachen’s liquidity. Huachen said it is working on obtaining the funds necessary to make the dollar bond coupon payment “as soon as possible”.

› HYDOO INTL PLANS TAP OF 2021S plans to reopen its 14% senior unsecured notes due December 2021 for a tap of US$50m, bringing the total outstanding to US$243.5m. The new bonds will be consolidated and form a single class with the earlier US$193.5m offering and have the same terms and conditions, but a different issue date and price, according to a public filing on December 27. The Chinese property developer completed a two-part bond offering comprising a new money issue and an exchange offer on December 19. The company sold US$81.827m of bonds in a new money offering of two-year senior unsecured notes alongside US$111.673m of new 2021s to be issued under its exchange offer. The exchange offer was open to holders of Hydoo’s US$157m 12% senior notes due May 9 2020. Both parts of the earlier issue were priced at par with a 14% coupon to yield 15% since the bonds will be redeemed at maturity at a cash price of 102.236. Proceeds of the newly proposed bonds will be used for debt repayment, financing an acquisition or development of assets or property and general corporate purposes.

HYDOO INTERNATIONAL HOLDING

Wholly owned subsidiary IS (Hong Kong) Investment is the issuer and Industrial Securities (Hong Kong) Financial is the keepwell provider. The notes are supported by an irrevocable standby letter of credit from Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, Fujian provincial branch. The Reg S issue has an expected A1 rating from Moody’s. Proceeds will be used for general corporate purposes. China Industrial Securities International and ICBC were joint global coordinators as well as joint lead managers and joint bookrunners with China Citic Bank International, China Minsheng Banking Corp Hong Kong branch, CMB Wing Lung Bank and Shanghai Pudong Development Bank Hong Kong branch.

› JIAOZUO MAKES 363-DAY FORAY JIAOZUO INVESTMENT GROUP on January 3 priced US$100m 363-day senior unsecured notes at par to yield 6.5%, in line with price guidance. Proceeds from the unrated Reg S issue are for general corporate purposes, including project construction, debt repayment and working capital. Central Wealth Securities Investment was the sole global coordinator as well as joint bookrunner and lead manager with Haitong International, Zhongtai International, CMBC Capital and Po Tai Securities (Hong Kong). Jiaozuo Investment Group is a stateowned investment and financing entity which is involved in the infrastructure construction and municipal development of the city of Jiaozuo in Henan province.

› KAISA GROUP ISSUES CALLABLE BOND

has priced US$295m three-year credit-enhanced senior unsecured bonds at par to yield 2.9%, inside initial guidance of 3.1% area.

rated B1/B/B, has priced a US$500m five-year non-call three bond at par on January 8 to yield 10.5%, in line with final price guidance. Initial guidance was 10.875% area for the fixed-rate Reg S senior notes. The deal received orders of over US$2.8bn from 156 accounts at final pricing, including US$500m from lead managers. Asian investors took 73% of the bonds and the rest went to Europe. Fund managers took 91%, followed by banks at 6% and private banks and others at 3%. The expected issue ratings are B2/B (Moody’s/Fitch). The bond is callable at 103 in January 2023 and at 101 in January 2024. Proceeds will be used to refinance medium to long-term offshore debt, which will become due within one year. Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank and Haitong International were joint global coordinators

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› INDUSTRIAL SEC HK GETS ICBC BACKING INDUSTRIAL SECURITIES (HONG KONG) FINANCIAL HOLDINGS

KAISA GROUP,

as well as joint bookrunners and joint lead managers with BOC International, Barclays, China Citic Bank International, Guotai Junan International, Kaisa Financial Group, Fulbright Securities and HeungKong Financial.

› KWG TACKLES SEVENS Chinese property company KWG GROUP last Monday sold US$300m seven-year non-call four bonds at par to yield 7.4%. The Reg S deal, rated BB– by Fitch, received orders of over US$900m at final pricing from 74 accounts. Asian investors took 99% of the bonds, and the rest went to EMEA. Fund managers, asset managers and hedge funds together took 88% of the deal, while banks and financial institutions took 5% and the remaining 7% went to private banks. Haitong International was sole global coordinator, lead manager and bookrunner. Proceeds will be used to refinance a portion of the company’s debt. KWG Group will have the rights to early partial redemption of the notes in 2024 at 103%, in 2025 at 101% and in 2026 at par.

› LOGAN PROPERTY REFINANCES LOGAN PROPERTY HOLDINGS priced US$300m of five-year non-call three senior unsecured bonds on January 7 to yield 5.75%, well inside initial guidance of 6.25% area. The Chinese property developer is rated Ba3/BB/BB/BB+ (Moody’s/S&P/Fitch/ Lianhe Global), while the Reg S deal has an expected rating of BB/BB+ (Fitch/Lianhe). The fixed-rate notes priced at par and are callable from January 14 2023 at 102. Logan, which describes itself as China’s 23rd biggest property developer by comprehensive strength, intends to use the proceeds to refinance debt. Deutsche Bank, China Citic Bank International, Credit Suisse, Haitong International and UBS were joint global coordinators and lead managers as well as bookrunners.

› LONGFOR SELLS DUAL-TRANCHER Property developer LONGFOR GROUP HOLDINGS (Baa3/BBB/BBB) raised US$650m on January 6 from two tranches of US dollar bonds. A US$250m 3.375% 7.25-year bond priced at 99.940 to yield 3.385%, or Treasuries plus 168bp, inside initial guidance of Treasuries plus 200bp area. A US$400m 3.850% 12-year bond priced at 99.857 to yield 3.865%, or Treasuries plus 208bp, inside initial guidance of Treasuries plus 245bp area. The Reg S senior unsecured notes have expected ratings of Baa3/BBB–/BBB. Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, Haitong


COUNTRY REPORT CHINA

International, HSBC and Morgan Stanley were joint global coordinators. They were also joint bookrunners and lead managers with CICC and Credit Suisse. Proceeds are for debt refinancing and general corporate purposes.

› RADIANCE SELLS US$300M BOND Chinese property developer RADIANCE GROUP has raised US$300m from a bond offering that will be mainly used to refinance onshore debt. The 10.50% two-year senior unsecured bonds were priced at 98.473 to yield 11.375%, inside initial guidance of 11.875% area. Final statistics were not available at the time of writing but orders were said have been over US$3.3bn at the time of releasing final guidance, including US$1.5bn from the leads. Subsidiary Radiance Capital Investments is the issuer and Radiance Group is the parent guarantor. The Reg S notes have an expected B rating from Fitch, while the parent guarantor is rated B/B/BB– (S&P/Fitch)/ Lianhe Global). Haitong International, Guotai Junan International, Zhongrong PT Securities, HeungKong Financial and Standard Chartered Bank were joint global coordinators. They were also joint lead managers and joint bookrunners with Admiralty Harbour, Barclays, Central Wealth Securities Investment, China Investment Securities International, China International Capital Corp, CMB International, CMBC Capital, Morgan Fuel Go Securities, Orient Securities (Hong Kong), TF International Securities and Zhongtai International.

› SHANDONG IRON SELLS SHORT-DATED has priced 330day €62m credit-enhanced notes at par to yield 2%, in line with price guidance. The unrated senior unsecured notes have a standby letter of credit from China Zheshang Bank Jinan branch. The Reg S issue also has a change of control put option at 101%, raising the level of investor comfort. Proceeds will be used for the repayment of debt of the issuer and its subsidiaries. Zhongtai International is the sole global coordinator as well as the joint bookrunner and joint lead manager with Central Wealth Securities Investment Limited and Fosun Hani.

SHANDONG IRON & STEEL GROUP

› SHENGZHOU INVESTMENT GOES SMALL Chinese local government financing vehicle SHENGZHOU INVESTMENT HOLDINGS has priced a US$100m three-year bond offering at par

to yield 6%, inside initial guidance of mid 6% area. The issuer and the Reg S senior unsecured bonds are unrated. Proceeds will be used for onshore project construction, refinancing and business development. Guosen Securities (HK), CMBC Capital, China Industrial Securities International and Industrial Bank Hong Kong branch were joint global coordinators as well as joint lead managers and joint bookrunners with China International Capital Corp and Goldbridge Securities. The issuer handles primary land development and consolidation, urban infrastructure construction, hotel services and waterworks in Shengzhou, a city in Zhejiang province.

› SINO-OCEAN PRICES 10-YEAR has priced a US$400m 4.75% 10-year bond at Treasuries plus 315bp, inside initial guidance of Treasuries plus 340bp. The bonds priced on January 8 at 98.352 to yield 4.961%. The Reg S deal received orders of over US$2.4bn, including US$665m from the lead managers. Asian investors took 96% of the senior unsecured notes and the rest went to Europe. Fund managers took 53%, banks 42% and the rest was taken by private banks, sovereign institutions and others. Wholly owned subsidiary Sino-Ocean Land Treasure IV is the issuer and SinoOcean Group is the guarantor. The deal is rated Baa3/BBB– (Moody’s/ Fitch), in line with the guarantor. Proceeds will be used primarily for debt refinancing. HSBC, Goldman Sachs and China Citic Bank International were joint global coordinators as well as lead managers and bookrunners with China International Capital Corporation, UBS, BOC International, CMB Wing Lung Bank, China Everbright Bank Hong Kong Branch, Haitong International, Credit Suisse and CLSA.

SINO-OCEAN GROUP

› SUNAC CHINA RAISES US$540M SUNAC CHINA HOLDINGS priced a US$540m fiveyear non-call three bond on January 7 at 6.5%, inside initial guidance of 7% area. The Chinese property developer is rated Ba3/BB–/BB, while the Reg S issue has expected ratings of B1/B+/BB. The bonds priced at par and have a first call date at 103 on January 10 2023. Proceeds will be used mainly to refinance debt. HSBC, Morgan Stanley, Barclays, China Citic

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

Bank International, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, Guotai Junan International and Nomura were joint global coordinators, bookrunners and lead managers.

› WUHAN DANGDAI OFFERS EXCHANGE WUHAN DANGDAI SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY INDUSTRIES

has launched an exchange offer for its outstanding US$289.4m 7.25% senior guaranteed bonds due 2020, according to a stock exchange filing. Under the offer, every US$1,000 in principal amount of the 2020s can be exchanged for new US dollar notes at par plus accrued interest and a US$15 additional cash incentive. The new three-year notes will carry a minimum yield of 10.5% per annum. The Chinese pharmaceutical company expects to announce the final interest rate on the new notes on or about January 13. The deadline for the exchange offer is January 10 and the settlement date is expected to be on or about January 16. The 2020s were issued by Dangdai International Investments in November 2017 and are guaranteed by Wuhan Dangdai Science. The guarantor and its affiliates hold approximately 3% of the 2020s. Wuhan Dangdai Science said the purpose of the exchange offer is to extend the maturity profile of its foreign currency-denominated debt and improve its debt structure. CLSA, Haitong International, China Everbright Bank Hong Kong branch and CMBC Securities are dealer managers for the exchange offer and DF King is the information and exchange agent.

(GROUP)

› YANGO PRINTS WELL INSIDE GUIDANCE YANGO GROUP,

rated B2/B/B+/BB– (Moody’s/ S&P/Fitch/Lianhe Global), has raised US$300m from a 9.25% 3.25-year non-call two bond. The Reg S bond priced at 98.318 on January 8 to yield 9.875%, in line with final guidance and inside initial guidance of 10.375% area. The senior unsecured notes have expected ratings of B/BB– (Fitch/Lianhe Global). The issue received orders of over US$2.7bn from 148 accounts at final pricing, including US$420m from lead managers. Asian investors took 95% of the bonds and the rest went to EMEA. Asset managers and fund managers took 91%, banks and financial institutions 5% and private banks 4%. Yango Justice International is the issuer and Yango Group is the guarantor. 29


The bond is callable at 103 in January 2022. Proceeds will be used for refinancing offshore debt. Guotai Junan International, Haitong International, UBS, CMB International, Admiralty Harbour, Orient Securities and CLSA are joint global coordinators, lead managers and bookrunners.

› YUZHOU SCORES TIGHT PRINT YUZHOU PROPERTIES, rated Ba3/BB–/BB–/BB (Moody’s/S&P/Fitch/Lianhe Global), last Monday sold US$645m six-year non-call four bonds after tightening pricing to 7.375%, well inside initial price guidance of 8% area. The fixed-rate senior notes, rated B1/BB–/ BB (Moody’s/Fitch/Lianhe), were priced at par. Strong demand helped the issuer tighten pricing sharply. The deal received over US$4.1bn of orders, including US$725m from lead banks, from over 200 accounts. Asset and fund managers bought 83% of the deal, with banks and financial institutions taking 9%, private banks 4% and corporate and sovereign investors taking 4%. Asia accounted for 87% with EMEA making up 11% and offshore US 2% of the deal. The pricing came below Nomura’s fair value for the new issue at 7.6%–7.7%, which had used the company’s outstanding 2024s and 2025s as references. The 2024s and 2025s were yesterday quoted at 7.1% and 7.3%, respectively. Another reference point was the US dollar 2024s of KWG Group Holdings and China SCE Group Holdings, which were quoted yesterday at 6.4% and 6.8%, respectively. Proceeds will be used primarily to refinance medium to long-term offshore debt that will become due within a year. BOC International, HSBC, JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Deutsche Bank, Credit Suisse, Haitong International, CMB International and Yuzhou Financial were joint global coordinators as well as bookrunners and lead managers.

› ZGC GROUP PLANS DEBUT BOND ISSUE ZHONGGUANCUN DEVELOPMENT GROUP,

rated A (stable) by Fitch, kicked off investor meetings on January 9 in London, Singapore and Hong Kong for a debut US dollar bond offering. HSBC, DBS Bank, GF Securities and Silk Road International are joint global coordinators on the Reg S issue as well as joint bookrunners and joint lead managers with ICBC International. The proposed senior unsecured bonds will be issued by wholly owned subsidiary 30

ZGC International Investment and will benefit from a keepwell deed and a deed of equity interest purchase undertaking from the parent company. ZGC Group is majority-owned by Zhongguancun Science Park Administrative Committee on behalf of the Beijing municipal government. It is responsible for infrastructure investment and the daily operations of the Zhongguancun Science Park. The proposed bonds have an expected A rating from Fitch, in line with ZGC Group. Proceeds from the bond issue will be used for overseas investments, overseas refinancing and general corporate purposes.

› ZHENGZHOU LGFV SELLS FIVE-YEAR ZHENGZHOU URBAN CONSTRUCTION INVESTMENT GROUP

has priced a US$200m five-year senior unsecured bond offering at par to yield 3.8%, inside initial 4.3% area guidance. Final statistics were not available at the time of writing but orders were said to be over US$1.9bn at the time of final guidance, including US$600m from the leads. The Reg S bonds have expected ratings of BBB+/A– (Fitch/Lianhe Global), on par with the issuer. The local government financing vehicle of Zhengzhou city in China’s central Henan province plans to use the proceeds to fund the development and construction of operational projects and for debt refinancing. China International Capital Corp and China Citic Bank International were joint global coordinators as well as joint bookrunners and joint lead managers with Bank of China, BoCom International, China Minsheng Banking Corp Hong Kong branch, CMB International, Orient Securities (Hong Kong) and China Merchants Securities (HK). ZUCI has responsibility for municipal roads and infrastructure, resettlement housing developments, and the construction and operation of public assets and community facilities. It printed its debut dollar bond in November last year, a US$300m 3.8% threeyear senior unsecured note which drew final orders of over US$2.4bn.

› ZHENRO PROPERTIES PRINTS 2024 NOTES rated B1/B/B+, has raised US$290m from an offering of 7.875% senior notes due April 2024. The Reg S notes priced on January 7 at 99.945 to yield 7.875% and have expected ratings of B2/B+ (Moody’s/Fitch). Initial guidance was at 8.4% area.

Asian investors bought 83% of the notes, with the remainder going to Europe. Fund managers and banks took 94%, and private banks 6%. Zhenro has a call option at 103 from January 14 2023, and the notes will mature on April 14 2024. Proceeds will be used for refinancing debt. Deutsche Bank, HSBC, BNP Paribas, CCB International, CLSA, CMB International, Goldman Sachs, Haitong International, Standard Chartered Bank and Zhenro Securities were joint global coordinators, bookrunners and lead managers.

› ZHONGRUI INDUSTRIAL BORROWS SHORT has priced US$70m two-year Reg S senior notes at par to yield 12%, in line with price guidance. Zhengzhou Zhongrui Industrial Group is the parent guarantor and China Coal Solution and Hechang Real Estate Group are subsidiary guarantors. Moody’s on December 20 cut the parent group’s issuer rating to B3 from B2 and changed the outlook to stable from negative in anticipation that the property developer and coal producer’s credit metrics will weaken over the next 12-18 months. The rating agency forecast that the parent group’s net debt/Ebitda will weaken to around 8.5 times over the next 12-18 months from 8.2 times for the 12 months ended June 30 2019. The new bond issue has an expected Caa1 rating from Moody’s. Proceeds will be used for refinancing and general corporate purposes. Haitong International was the sole global coordinator, bookrunner and lead manager.

ZHONGRUI INDUSTRIAL GROUP

› BOCOM FINANCIAL EYES THREE-YEAR BANK OF COMMUNICATIONS FINANCIAL ASSET INVESTMENT, a subsidiary of Bank of Communications, plans to raise up to Rmb5bn from three-year financial bonds, according to market sources. Books will open later this month. The issuer has received an expected rating of AAA from China Chengxin.

› BOHAI BANK TO ISSUE FINANCIAL BONDS

ZHENRO PROPERTIES,

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

plans to issue Rmb10bn three-year financial bonds, according to a public filing. Books open on January 13 and the settlement will be on January 15. Citic Securities is the lead underwriter and

CHINA BOHAI BANK


COUNTRY REPORT CHINA

ICBC, Bank of China and China Zheshang Bank are joint underwriters on the deal. Proceeds will be used to replenish the bank’s capital and support local infrastructure projects.

› DAIMLER ISSUES PANDA BONDS German carmaker DAIMLER, rated AAA/ A2/A (China Bond/Moody’s/S&P), has issued Rmb3bn two-year Panda bonds via a private placement at 3.5%, in the middle of initial guidance of 3.3%–3.7%. The issue was 1.33 times oversubscribed. Bank of China was lead underwriter and bookrunner and ICBC was joint underwriter. This is the issuer’s first Panda bond offering under a new issuance programme approved by Chinese financial regulators. Daimler last issued Rmb5bn dualtranche private Panda bonds in November. A Rmb2bn two-year tranche was priced at 3.68% and a Rmb3bn three-year tranche at 4.04%.

› TROUBLED QINGHAI SOE PROPOSES State-owned QINGHAI SALT LAKE INDUSTRY, a potash producer based in China’s heavily indebted Qinghai province, has tabled a debt restructuring plan that comes with steep haircuts for onshore bondholders. Non-bank creditors can choose to either convert debt into equity at a discount or accept an extension of up to five years, according to people familiar with the matter. Bondholders who choose to extend for two years will face a 40% haircut on principal repayments, while a three-year extension will come with 32% losses, four years with 20% and five years at full face value. Interest will be paid at the lower of 150bp below the one-year benchmark lending rate or the original interest rate.

US$(m)

plans to issue up to Rmb4bn perpetual bonds to replenish the bank’s Additional Tier 1 capital, according to market sources. Books will open later this month, subject to market conditions. China Chengxin has assigned a AA+ rating to the issuer and AA to the bonds.

XIAMEN BANK

SYNDICATED LOANS › YANGTZE POWER BRIDGE FOR PERUVIAN State-owned utilities company CHINA YANGTZE has completed a US$4bn bridge loan backing its proposed acquisition of New York-listed Sempra Energy’s South American power assets. Bank of China Luxembourg branch, Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, Banco Santander Hong Kong branch and MUFG Bank were the lenders of the one-year facility, which closed as a club. The former two banks POWER

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

31

Amount Issues

US$(m)

%

%

1 Citic

69

15,259.6

10.4

1 Bank of China

193

28,461.0 36.4

2 CICC

62

13,682.2

9.3

59

12,789.0

16.3

3 Goldman Sachs

38

8,512.7

5.8 5.6

3 ABC

15

7,501.3

9.6

4 Morgan Stanley

48

8,215.5

4 CCB

14

6,203.6

7.9

5 China Sec

56

7,444.2

5.1

5 SAICFC

1

2,895.5

3.7

6 Huatai Sec

36

6,311.3

4.3

6 China Merchants Bank

6

2,827.1

3.6

7 Credit Suisse

31

5,275.0

3.6

7 ICBC

7

2,669.5

3.4

8 Guotai Junan Sec

42

5,212.5

3.6

8 Citic

5

2,189.9

2.8

9 Citigroup

36

5,162.2

3.5

9 Bank of Shanghai

2

2,076.5

2.7

59

5,117.2

3.5

1,275.0

1.6

631

146,554.0

Total

4 330

78,257.4

10 Haitong Sec Total *Market volume

* Based on market of syndication and market total

“Standard Exclusion not applicable”

Proportional credit

Proportional credit

Source: Refinitiv data

SDC Code: S8b

› ANT FINANCIAL INCREASES LOAN

SDC Code: C1m

Top bookrunners of China equity and

2 BoCom

10 SMFG

came in with US$1.5bn each, while the latter two committed US$500m each. China Yangtze Power International (Hong Kong) is the borrower of the US$4bn loan, while parent CYP is the guarantor. CYP has agreed to purchase Sempra Energy’s Peruvian businesses for US$3.59bn in cash, the company said in an October 1 filing to the Shanghai Stock Exchange. The acquisition includes Sempra’s 83.6% stake in Peru’s largest electricity distributor Luz del Sur, as well as its interest in Tecsur, a provider of electric construction and infrastructure services to Luz del Sur and third parties, plus Luz del Sur’s generation business Inland Energy, Sempra said in a September 30 press release. The transaction is expected to close in the first quarter of 2020, subject to approval from the Peruvian anti-trust authority and the Bermuda Monetary Authority. Separately, Sempra announced the sale of its businesses in Chile to another Chinese state-owned enterprise. State Grid Corp of China is in discussions with lenders for a loan of over US$2bn to back its proposed acquisition of the Chilean businesses, including 100% stakes in Chilquinta Energía and Tecnored, for a cash consideration of US$2.23bn, subject to adjustments for working capital, net debt and other adjustments. The financing is expected to comprise a one-year bridge and a two-year term loan, offering double-digit all-in pricing.

Ant Financial Services Group has exercised part of a greenshoe on its three-year newmoney loan to increase the borrowing to US$3bn after attracting nine lenders in general syndication. ANZ, China Construction Bank (Asia), Citigroup, Credit Suisse, HSBC, ING Bank, JP Morgan, Morgan Stanley and Standard Chartered were the original mandated lead arrangers and bookrunners of the borrowing, while Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria, Bank of China, Bank of Communications, Barclays, DBS Bank, Goldman Sachs and Mizuho Bank joined as MLABs. The loan had a base size of US$2.5bn and a greenshoe option of US$1bn. Banks joining as MLABs were offered a top-level all-in pricing of 125bp via an interest margin of 95bp over Libor. ALIPAY (HONG KONG) HOLDING is the borrower on the deal. Funds are for general corporate purposes. Signing was on December 23. In November, the borrower, an affiliate of Chinese e-commerce giant

Name

Amount Deals

› XIAMEN BANK EYES AT1 BONDS

convertible offerings 1/1/19 – 31/12/19

Top bookrunners of China syndicated loans 1/1/19 – 31/12/19 Name

Qinghai Salt Lake plans to discuss the proposal during an investor meeting on January 17. No public announcement has been made by the company. The company has outstanding debts of Rmb6.17bn, according to Refinitiv data. Qinghai Salt Lake is China’s largest potash producer with an annual production capacity of around 5 million tonnes. The company shocked the bond market last year after it entered a restructuring process following a missed payment. Golmud Mountain Industrial Company claimed Qinghai Salt Lake owed it Rmb439m, equivalent to US$62m, for labour, and its claim was later accepted by the local court.

Source: Refinitiv data


Jiangxi Copper digs into FQM Loans Miner to become largest shareholder in Canadian copper producer JIANGXI COPPER has raised a syndicated loan of Rmb4.9bn (US$705m) to back its proposed acquisition of a stake in Toronto-listed copper producer First Quantum Minerals. China Development Bank Jiangxi branch, China Construction Bank Jiangxi branch, and Citic Bank Nanchang branch are the lenders on the facility, and committed Rmb2.45bn, Rmb1.225bn and Rmb1.225bn, respectively. On December 9 Jiangxi Copper announced that wholly owned subsidiary Jiangxi Copper (Hong Kong) Investment had agreed to purchase Cupric Holdings from Canadian investment company Pangaea Investment Management for US$1.1bn. Cupric held around 18% of FQM's issued share capital as of that date. The transaction is subject to, among others, the results of the due diligence conducted on the target company and its assets and liabilities, Jiangxi Copper's internal approvals for the acquisition, and the acquisition financing being put in place. It would make Jiangxi Copper the largest shareholder in FQM. The Canadian copper producer adopted

Alibaba Group Holding, completed the amendment and extension of an existing US$3.5bn loan it obtained in May 2017. Citigroup was the coordinator of the A&E exercise, which lowered the interest margin from 135bp to 95bp over Libor. Lenders earned a 30bp consent fee for agreeing to the amendment. For full allocations, see www.ifre.com.

› ENN ECOLOGICAL BACK FOR US$200M Shanghai-listed ENN Ecological Holdings has launched a US$200m three-year term loan, returning to the loan market after an absence of more than two years. Standard Chartered is the sole mandated lead arranger and bookrunner of the bullet transaction, which offers an interest margin of 195bp over Libor. MLAs committing US$40m or more receive an all-in pricing of 215bp based on a 60bp management fee, while lead arrangers joining with US$20m–$39m are offered an all-in pricing of 208bp via a 39bp fee. Arrangers coming in for US$10m–$19m earn an all-in pricing of 202bp via a 21bp fee. XINNNENG (HONG KONG) ENERGY INVESTMENT is the borrower, while ENN Ecological Holdings is 32

a poison pill defence through a rights plan adding a potential barrier to any takeover proposal, Reuters reported on January 6. FQM said its rights plan is triggered in the event any person becomes a beneficial holder of 20% or more of the outstanding shares. It said the plan is subject to ratification by shareholders within six months of its adoption. Last September FQM said it was in talks with Jiangxi for a potential sale of a minority interest in its Zambian copper assets, Kansanshi and Sentinel. However, Jiangxi is prevented from buying more than a 20% interest in FQM under a standstill agreement the companies reached in October, the Reuters report said. FQM owns nine copper mine development projects in eight countries including Zambia, Panama and Peru totalling approximately 49.25 million tons of copper resources. It also has two large-scale nickel ore resources in Australia and Zambia totalling 2.38 million tons. The company's actual copper production in 2018 was approximately 606,000 tons. CHIEN MI WONG

the guarantor. Funds are for general corporate purposes. A site visit is scheduled for January 15-16 in Hebei province’s Langfang city. The borrower last tapped the markets for a same-sized two-year bullet loan in September 2017. Standard Chartered also led that deal, which offered a top-level all-in pricing of 300bp based on an interest margin of 262.5bp over Libor and a 75bp management fee. ENN Ecological, which is mainly engaged in the coal and chemical businesses, owns and operates a coal-to-chemical plant, a coal mine and small-scale LNG plants in China.

› GEELY UNIT LAPS UP €400M BORROWING GEELY GLORY INVESTMENT,

a unit of Chinese automobile manufacturer Zhejiang Geely Holding Group, has raised €400m (US$446m) from a three-year loan. Bank of America was the original mandated lead arranger and bookrunner of the unsecured loan, which was prefunded last year and signed in midDecember. The bullet loan paid a top level all-in of 200bp based on an interest margin of 175bp over Euribor and 75bp upfront fees. International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

The borrowing carries a guarantee from Proper Glory Holdings, which owns a 28.9% stake in Hong Kong-listed Geely Automobile Holdings. The loan also has a keepwell agreement from Zhejiang Geely. Hong Kong-incorporated Geely Glory and British Virgin Islands entity Proper Glory are units of Zhejiang Geely. Proceeds are for general corporate purposes. Geely Group last raised a Rmb1.4bn (US$198m) two-year offshore borrowing in August for Genius Auto Finance, a subsidiary of Geely Automobile Holdings. The self-arranged deal had seven banks participating. Lenders were offered top-level all-in pricing of 111% and 110% of the PBoC rates, respectively, based on upfront fees of 25bp and 20bp for tranches A and B. Geely Automobile Holdings owns 80% of Genius Auto Finance, while BNP Paribas Personal Finance SA holds the remainder. For full allocations, see www.ifre.com.

› SINOPHARM LEASING UNIT RETURNS SINOPHARM HOLDING (CHINA) FINANCE LEASING

is returning to the loan market for a US$250m three-year dual-currency term loan, five months after obtaining a similar facility. ANZ, BNP Paribas and Mizuho Bank are the mandated lead arrangers and bookrunners of the latest financing, which will be used for general corporate purposes. The loan pays an interest margin of 180bp over Hibor or Libor, and has an average life of 2.675 years. Banks have been invited to join as MLAs with commitments of US$30m or more for a top-level all-in pricing of 203bp through an upfront fee of 61.5bp. Lead arrangers taking US$20m–$29m earn an all-in of 200bp based on a 53.5bp fee, and arrangers with tickets of US$10m–$19m receive an all-in of 197bp through a 45.5bp fee. Commitments are due by February 21, with signing slated for March 6. Pricing on the latest borrowing is marginally lower than a US$200m threeyear facility the company completed last August. Standard Chartered was the sole MLAB of that financing, which offered a top-level all-in pricing of 205bp based on a margin of 180bp over Hibor or Libor and an average life of 2.675 years. The borrower was set up in Shanghai’s free trade zone as a wholly owned subsidiary of Sinopharm Group to focus on financial leasing and factoring. Sinopharm Group, a major


COUNTRY REPORT CHINA

Star rises on China’s first dual-class IPO Equities Landmark UCloud float comes ahead of first pre-profit listing China's new tech board is set for two landmark listings that will confirm significant reforms in the A-share capital market. UCLOUD TECHNOLOGY is the first company with weighted voting rights to go public in China's domestic market, while SUZHOU ZELGEN BIOPHARMACEUTICALS will be the first lossmaking company to complete an IPO. Both are set to list on the Shanghai Star market, and are sponsored by CICC. China's Nasdaq-style Star board allows unprofitable companies, companies with weighted voting rights or variable interest entity structures to list, opening up the domestic equity market for more homegrown technology companies looking to raise capital. UCloud Technology, a Chinese cloud services provider, wrapped up its Rmb1.94bn (US$279m) IPO last Friday. It sold 58.5m Class B shares, or 13.9% of its enlarged capital, at Rmb33.23 per share. UCloud's three founders hold Class A shares that carry five times the voting rights of its Class B shares, according to its filings. Post-IPO, the three founders will hold a combined 23.1% stake while controlling 60.1% of the voting rights. The P/E ratio based on 2018 earnings is 181.85, which is nearly five times the industry

average ratio of 36.65 in the past month. However, the deal was downsized from an original target of 100m–121m A-shares to raise up to Rmb4.75bn. The company allotted 20% of the IPO to strategic investors and planned to split the remainder 80%/20% between institutional and retail tranches. As the retail tranche was subscribed 2,958 times, the company clawed back 4.68m shares from the institutional part to the retail tranche. Institutional investors ended up with 56% of the IPO shares, while the remaining 24% went to retail. UCloud plans to use the proceeds for three projects related to a multimedia cloud platform, cloud security technology and an AI platform, and to build a new data centre in Inner Mongolia. As the sole sponsor of the deal, CICC is working with lead mangers Guotai Junan Securities and Citi Orient Securities.

pharmaceutical firm, is in turn a unit of state-owned China National Pharmaceutical Group.

Taiwan Acceptance, the borrower’s direct parent, is the guarantor. Both companies are units of automobiles and textile manufacturer Yulong Group.

› TAC LEASING BACK FOR RMB875M LOAN TAC LEASING is returning to the loan markets after nearly a year for a Rmb875mequivalent (US$126m) three-year borrowing. KGI Bank is the mandated lead arranger and bookrunner of the transaction, which is available in either renminbi or US dollars. The interest margin on the renminbi portion is 110% of the PBoC rate, which stands at 4.75% for tenors from one to five years. The US dollar portion offers a margin of 160bp over Libor. MLAs joining with Rmb150m or more will receive a flat participation fee of 10bp, while co-arrangers committing Rmb100m–Rmb149m are offered a 7.5bp fee. Participants with Rmb50m–Rmb99m will earn a 5bp fee. Commitments are due by February 21. Funds are for refinancing and general corporate purposes.

NO PROFIT TEST

Meanwhile, Zelgen will run bookbuilding for a single day on January 14 for a Rmb2.38bn (US$342m) Star float. The IPO marks another important reform in the Chinese A-share market, where the listings of unprofitable companies were

EQUITY CAPITAL MARKETS › JIANGXIAOBAI GETS INTO IPO SPIRIT

prohibited until the launch of the Shanghai tech board last year. Founded in 2009, Zelgen specialises in innovative treatments for cancer, blood disorders and other diseases. It posted a net loss of Rmb442m in 2018, and a net loss of Rmb323m in the first half of 2019. The company is offering 60m A-shares for a free float of at least 25%. It plans to allot 5% of the IPO to strategic investors and split the remainder 80/20 between institutional and retail investors. Zelgen is the first tech board candidate to take advantage of listing criteria that do not include revenue or profit tests for companies with a minimum market capitalisation of Rmb4bn. To qualify, an issuer's main business or products need to be approved by the relevant state departments and it has to outline its accomplishments in its sector and have several niche markets. Companies in the pharmaceutical industry must have at least one core product under Phase II clinical trials. Zelgen will spend Rmb1.45bn of the proceeds on drug research, and use the rest to build a research and production base and replenish working capital. CICC is working with the joint bookrunner Soochow Securities. KAREN TIAN, FIONA LAU

Founded in 2011, Chongqing-based Jiangxiaobai targets younger drinkers than its traditional rivals for spirits with a less spicy taste. Its products are sold in more than 20 countries including China, India, Germany and the UK. Jiangxiaobai did not respond to emails seeking comment.

› SUNAC CHINA BUILDS WAR CHEST

Chinese liquor maker JIANGXIAOBAI is planning an IPO which could raise US$500m–$1bn, according to people with knowledge of the matter. The manufacturer and seller of baijiu (white spirit) has invited potential advisers to pitch for the transaction which could come as early as this year, said the people. The company has not decided where to list as yet but the people said Hong Kong seems a more likely venue than the US. The company counts Hillihouse Capital, IDG Capital, Tiantu Capital and BA Capital among its investors, according to its website.

SUNAC CHINA has raised HK$8bn (US$1bn) from an upsized share placement. The Chinese property developer sold 186.9m primary shares, or about 4% of the enlarged share capital, at HK$42.80 per share. The deal was launched with 164m primary shares in an indicative price range of HK$42.70–$43.70 each. The issue price represents a discount of 8.3% to the company’s close of HK$46.65 last Thursday. The books were multiple times oversubscribed with more than 100 investors participating in the transaction. The top 10 investors took about 70% of the deal.

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

33


As of last Thursday, Sunac China’s shares had risen 44% in the past three months. There is a 90-day lock-up on the company. Proceeds will be used for general working capital. Morgan Stanley was the sole bookrunner.

› WUXI BIOLOGICS SELLS MORE WuXi Biologics Holdings has raised HK$5.8bn from an upsized sell-down in WUXI BIOLOGICS (CAYMAN). The deal, which was upsized from 53.8m to 60.8m shares, was priced at HK$96.05 per share compared to the HK$95–$97 range. The final price represents a discount of 6.9% to the company’s close of HK$103.20 last Thursday. The books were multiple times covered with strong participation from existing shareholders. More than 130 investors joined the deal with the top 10 investors taking about two-thirds of the transaction. Demand mainly came from Asia and there was also participation from Europe and the US. There is a three-month lock-up. After the sale, WuXi Biologics Holdings remains the controlling shareholder in WuXi Biologics (Cayman) with a 35.5% stake. Morgan Stanley was the sole bookrunner.

› ACTIVATION PRICES HK IPO AT MIDPOINT ACTIVATION GROUP, a marketing services provider in China, has raised HK$404m from a Hong Kong IPO after pricing the deal at the midpoint of the range, a person close to the deal said. The company sold 200m shares, or 25% of the enlarged share capital, at HK$2.02 each, versus an indicative price range of HK$1.71– $2.34. The issue price gives the company a market capitalisation of HK$1.61bn. There is an overallotment option of 15% of the base size. Activation’s clients include luxury fashion and car brands such as Chanel, Burberry and BMW. The shares are set to start trading on January 16. Dongxing Securities is the sole sponsor, and also joint bookrunner with CMB International and Haitong Securities.

at HK$1.50–$2.12 apiece, representing a forecast 2020 P/E of 7.5 times –10.6 times and a potential market capitalisation of US$271m–$384m. There is an overallotment option of 15% of the base size. Half of the proceeds will be used to produce online tour guides to cover more tourist attractions in China and overseas. The remainder will be used to recruit R&D staff and promote the brand as well as for strategic investments and working capital and general corporate purposes. The shares will start trading on January 17. The company recorded revenues of Rmb183m (US$26.2m) in the six months to June 2019, against Rmb63.7m a year earlier. Net profit rose to Rmb51.9m from Rmb15.4m over the same period. CCB International is the sole sponsor.

› CMES COMPLETES PRIVATE PLACEMENT Shanghai-listed CHINA MERCHANTS ENERGY SHIPPING has raised Rmb3.6bn from a private A-share placement. CMES sold 674m A-shares at Rmb5.36 each to eight investors including majority shareholder China Merchants Steam Navigation, which has committed to buy up to Rmb2bn of the placement, and JP Morgan Securities. China Merchants Steam Navigation will face a 36-month lock-up and the other seven investors lock-ups of 12 months. China Merchants Steam Navigation owned a 41.4% stake in the company before the deal. The proceeds will be used to buy ultra large crude carriers, bulk carriers, roll-on roll-off ships and VLCC gas desulfurisation scrubbers, and to repay debt to China Merchants Steam Navigation, which will cost Rmb5.54bn in total. Its A-shares closed at Rmb7.4 on January 10, down 2.6%. Citic Securities and China Merchants Securities are joint sponsors on the deal, and joint bookrunner with CICC.

› DADA-JD DAOJIA FILES FOR IPO

The books are covered for Chinese online tour guide service provider LVJI TECHNOLOGY HOLDINGS’ Hong Kong IPO of up to HK$748m. The base deal of 353m shares (88% primary/12% secondary), or 25% of the enlarged share capital, is being marketed

Chinese online grocery and delivery firm DADA-JD DAOJIA has filed confidentially for a US IPO of about US$700m–$800m, said people familiar with the situation. The company, backed by JD.com and Walmart, is planning to list in the first half of the year, said the people. Bank of America, Goldman Sachs and Jefferies are leading the float. A spokesperson from Dada-JD Daojia declined to comment. In 2016, JD.com, one of China’s largest e-commerce companies, merged its online-

34

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

› BOOKS COVERED FOR LVJI TECH’S IPO

to-offline business JD Daojia with Dada Nexus, China’s largest crowdsourcing delivery platform, to form Dada-JD Daojia. In August 2018, Dada-JD Daojia announced it had raised US$500m from global retail giant Walmart and JD.com in its latest round of financing. Walmart holds a 10% stake in Dada-JD Daojia, while JD.com owns an about a 47.5% equity interest on a fully diluted basis. Dada currently serves more than 1.4 million merchants and over 70 million individual users, according to the company’s website. JD Daojia also has more than 74 million registered users and over 30 million monthly active users.

› ENTERPRISES RESOURCES LAUNCHES IPO BEIJING ENTERPRISES URBAN RESOURCES GROUP

has launched a Hong Kong IPO of up to HK$720m, according to a term-sheet. A total of 900m primary shares, or 25% of the enlarged share capital, are on offer in an indicative price range of HK$0.69–$0.80, representing a forecast P/E of 9.2x–10.6x for 2019 and 6.4x–7.5x for 2020. The IPO will give the company a potential market capitalisation of HK$2.48bn–$2.88bn. There is an overallotment option of 15% of the base deal. A cornerstone investor, ZGC International, has indicated a US$10m interest in the deal. The integrated waste management company has nine hazardous waste treatment projects in China, serving clients like local government agencies. About half of the proceeds will be used for the development of hazardous waste treatment projects and the rest will be used for purchasing motor vehicles for environmental hygiene projects, repaying debt and working capital and general corporate purposes. DBS and Haitong International are the joint sponsors.

› GONGNIU TO LAUNCH SHANGHAI IPO GONGNIU GROUP will open the books on a proposed Rmb3.51bn Shanghai IPO for a day on Thursday, a day after it is set to price the deal. Gongniu Group, a manufacturer of electrical and electronic products, plans to offer 60m A-shares or 10% of its enlarged capital. It downsized the target from Rmb4.89bn in its pre-prospectus. Proceeds will be used on an R&D centre, IT services, three factories for wall switches, power converters and LED lighting, sales channels and marketing. Sinolink Securities is the sponsor.


COUNTRY REPORT CHINA

› HUIJING PRICES HK IPO AT BOTTOM Chinese property developer HUIJING HOLDINGS has raised HK$1.52bn from a Hong Kong IPO, a person close to the deal said. The company sold 788m shares, or 15% of the enlarged share capital, at the bottom of the HK$1.93–$2.39 indicative range. The shares will start trading on January 16. China Galaxy International is the sponsor. It is also joint bookrunner with CCB International, CMB International and Guotai Junan International. Huijing develops residential and commercial properties in the PRC with a focus on Guangdong and Hunan provinces. It posted a net profit of Rmb213m for the first half of 2019, down 11% over the same period of 2018.

› JIUMAOJIU PRICES HK IPO AT TOP has raised HK$2.2bn from a Hong Kong IPO after pricing the deal at the top of a HK$5.50–$6.60 price range, a person close to the deal said. The Chinese restaurant chain sold 333m shares, or 25% of the enlarged share capital, at HK$6.60 each, representing a 2020 P/E of 23.2. Four cornerstone investors are in the deal with a total investment of US$55m – BlackRock (US$20m), China Alpha (US$15m), WT Investment Management (US$15m) and Orient Asset Management (US$5m). The shares will start trading on January 15. CMB International is the sponsor, and global coordinator and bookrunner with CICC. Jiumaojiu operates 269 restaurants and manages 41 franchised restaurants in the PRC. It has five brands – Jiu Mao Jiu, Tai Er, Double Eggs, Cooking Spicy Kebab and Uncle Chef. The company posted a net profit of Rmb102m for the first half of 2019, up 88% over the same period of 2018.

JIUMAOJIU INTERNATIONAL

› KINGSOFT CLOUD PLANS US$500M IPO could raise about US$300m– $500m from a US IPO in the first half of next year, said people close to the deal. Credit Suisse, JP Morgan and UBS are leading the transaction. Hong Kong-listed Kingsoft announced earlier that its subsidiary Kingsoft Cloud made a confidential filing for a US IPO on December 20. According to the announcement, Kingsoft Cloud will cease to be a subsidiary of the company after the listing. Founded in 2012, Kingsoft Cloud provides

KINGSOFT CLOUD

cloud storage and cloud computation services. It earned revenue of Rmb976m for the first three quarters of 2019, a 62% increase year on year. It accounted for 48% of Kingsoft’s revenue in Q1-Q3.

› LIZHI TUNES IN FOR US$53M NASDAQ IPO Audio streaming company LIZHI has started bookbuilding for a Nasdaq IPO of up to US$53m. The Guangzhou-based podcast app operator is selling 4.1m primary ADSs in an indicative range of US$11–$13 per share, representing a 2020 forecast P/S of 1.9 times–2.3 times. The deal will price on January 16. Citigroup, Haitong International, AMTD, Needham & Company and Tiger Brokers are the joint bookrunners. Credit Suisse, which led the deal with Citigroup according to a public filing in October, is no longer on the transaction. WB Online Investment, an affiliate of Weibo, and Green Better, an affiliate of Xiaomi, and two other investors have indicated interest in investing up to a combined US$36m in the IPO. The company enables users to set up their own radio programmes and create and upload audio clips. It has 46.6 million average active monthly users. It posted a net loss of Rmb104m for the nine months ended September 30 2019, compared with Rmb11.3m over the same period in 2018. Lizhi FM has completed several rounds of fundraising since it was established in 2013. Its investors include Orchid Asia Group Management, Xiaomi, Shunwei Capital and Matrix Partners China.

› MICROPORT TO SPIN OFF CARDIOFLOW Hong Kong-listed MICROPORT SCIENTIFIC plans to spin off its MICROPORT CARDIOFLOW subsidiary through a stock exchange listing. The parent company did not specify when or where the listing might take place. MicroPort CardioFlow develops devices used in the treatment of heart diseases, principally heart valve diseases. Last July, MicroPort Scientific spun off another subsidiary, Shanghai MicroPort Endovascular MedTech, on the Shanghai tech board in a Rmb832m IPO. It was among the first batch of companies listing on the new board.

› PHOENIX TREE LAUNCHES NYSE IPO Chinese apartment leasing service PHOENIX TREE has started bookbuilding for a NYSE IPO of up to US$175m. International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

The company, which operates in the long-term rental market under the names Danke Apartment and Dream Apartment, is selling 10.6m primary ADSs in an indicative range of US$14.50–$16.50 per share, representing a 2020 forecast EV/Sales of 1.09 to 1.20 times or a post-shoe market capitalisation of US$2.96bn–$3.37bn. Some shareholders have indicated interest to purchase up to US$55m of the shares on offer, and a strategic investor has committed to US$60m in the deal. The deal will price on January 16. Founded in 2015, Phoenix Tree sealed a US$500m private financing round in March 2019 at a valuation of about US$2bn. Ant Financial, Alibaba’s financial services affiliate, led the latest financing round together with existing investor Tiger Global Management. Other investors include Primavera Capital, CMC Capital and Gaorong Venture Capital. As of September 30, Phoenix Tree managed more than 400,000 apartments in 13 cities. The company posted a net loss of Rmb2.5bn for the nine months ended September 2019, compared with a loss of Rmb813m over the same period in 2018. Citigroup, Credit Suisse and JP Morgan are the joint bookrunners.

› PSBC FULLY EXERCISES GREENSHOE POSTAL SAVINGS BANK OF CHINA has raised an additional Rmb4.27bn from its Shanghai IPO after fully exercising the greenshoe. The company sold an additional 776m A-shares at the issue price of Rmb5.5 each, representing 15% of the base deal of 5.17bn shares. Including the greenshoe, PSBC raised Rmb32.7bn from the largest equity offering in the A-share market since Agricultural Bank of China’s Rmb68.5bn Shanghai IPO in 2010. The shares have been trading above the issue price since they were listed in China on December 10 and touched a high of Rmb5.98 on January 3. The A-shares changed hands at Rmb5.82 last Friday morning, down 0.9%, while its H-shares were down 1% at HK$5.22, giving the company a market capitalisation of Rmb738bn. CICC and China Post Securities were sponsors of the deal, and bookrunners with UBS Securities and Citic Securities.

› ROYOLE PLANS US IPO Flexible display maker ROYOLE CORPORATION is planning a US IPO that could raise US$500m–$1bn this year, said people close to the deal. 35


The Chinese company has started preparatory work for the IPO with financial advisers, said the people. Founded in 2012, the Shenzhen-based company produces bendable screens for smart devices such as smartphones. Its investors include IDG Capital Partners, Poly Capital and Citic Capital, according to the company’s website. A private financing round in August 2018 valued the company at about US$5bn. In March, the company was reported to be looking to raise about US$1bn in a pre-IPO round at a valuation of about US$8bn. The company did not respond to emails seeking comment.

› SELL-DOWN IN XINYI SOLAR A group of shareholders have raised HK$1.79bn from the sale of their stakes in XINYI SOLAR Ý The deal, comprising 350m secondary shares or 4.3% of existing capital, was marketed at HK$5.10–$5.25 per share. It was priced at HK$5.125 or at a discount of 8.5% to the pre-deal close. The books were multiple times covered. Demand mainly came from Asia with participation from Europe and the US. The deal saw solid support from long-only investors and the top five investors took about 85% of the deal. The vendors were a group of individuals including current or former directors or senior management of the company. They will be subject to a 90-day lock-up. HSBCÝWASÝTHEÝBOOKRUNNER

› SHIMAO TO SPIN OFF UNIT SHIMAO PROPERTY is considering spinning off its property management service unit in a Hong Kong IPO to raise about US$500m– $600m this year, according to people close to the deal. The Hong Kong-listed Chinese property developer is in advanced discussions with potential advisers on the transaction, said the people. According to Shimao’s 2019 first-half financial report, for the six months ended June 30, revenue from property management and other income amounted to Rmb1.6bn, up 207% from a year earlier. Shimao did not respond to emails seeking comment.

› SIX COMPANIES FILE FOR IPOS

proposed Rmb3.44bn Shanghai IPO. It plans to offer up to 361m A-shares, or 10% of its enlarged capital. Proceeds will be used for four chemical products projects, to research an intellectual IT platform, build an R&D centre, replenish working capital and repay loans from banks. Huatai United Securities is the sponsor. JIANGXI JOVO ENERGY, ZHEJIANG PROVINCIAL NEW ENERGY INVESTMENT GROUP, and JINAN SHENGQUAN GROUP SHARE HOLDING have also filed for Shanghai IPOs to raise Rmb2.12bn, Rmb1.91bn, and Rmb1.21bn. CICC, Caitong Securities and Great Wall Securities are the respective sponsors. Meanwhile CAIDA SECURITIES has filed for a Shanghai IPO but it did not disclose the fundraising target. The local brokerage, owned by the Hebei bureau of the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission of the State Council, will sell up to 500m A-shares, or 15.4% of the enlarged capital. Proceeds will be used to replenish working capital. The company posted a net profit of Rmb73.7m in 2018 on revenue of Rmb1.46bn. Its main source of revenue is from stock trading commissions, which are showing a downward trend year by year. Stock trading commissions accounted for 58.8%, 53.3% and 38% of revenue from 2016-2018. China Securities is the sponsor. Separately, TIANNENG BATTERY GROUP, a spinoff of Hong Kong-listed Tianneng Power International, has filed to the Shanghai Stock Exchange for a proposed Rmb3.6bn Star IPO. The deal is set to be the third largest IPO on the Star market if it comes to fruition, after China Railway Signal and Communication (Rmb10.5bn) and Cathay Biotech (Rmb4.7bn). The company plans to offer between 85.6m shares (10% of current capital) and 116.6m shares. The battery manufacturer for e-riders will use the proceeds for four battery manufacturing and technical upgrade projects, to create a new database, and replenish working capital. It posted a net profit of Rmb475m for the first six months of 2019 on revenue of Rmb20.8bn. Citic Securities is the sponsor.

› SMOORE FILES FOR HK IPO

SHAANXI BEIYUAN CHEMICAL INDUSTRY GROUP,

a chemical products manufacturer based in northwest China, has filed to the China Securities Regulatory Commission for a

SMOORE INTERNATIONAL, one of the world’s largest e-cigarette makers, has filed for a Hong Kong IPO.

36

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

CLSA is the sponsor. IFR reported in August the company planned to raise about US$400m from the float in the first half of 2020. Smoore was listed on the China National Equities Exchange and Quotations and delisted from the over-the-counter exchange in June. Smoore posted profit and total comprehensive income of Rmb921m for the first half of 2019, more than five times the Rmb181m earned from the same period of 2018. Smoore’s clients include Japan Tobacco, Reynolds Asia-Pacific, British American Tobacco, RELX and NJOY.

› TIANQI LITHIUM CLOSES RIGHTS ISSUE Shenzhen-listed TIANQI LITHIUM has raised Rmb2.93bn from a rights offering, lower than the Rmb7bn it was targeting. The company sold 335m A-shares, or 97.8% of the offering, on a 2.9-for-10 basis at Rmb8.75 each, compared with its Rmb29.06 share price on December 18 when trading was halted. It had planned to offer 343m shares on a 3-for-10 basis. The company’s biggest shareholder, Chengdu Tianqi Industry Group, and the other two existing shareholders bought 41% of the offering. Proceeds will be used to repay part of a loan for the purchase of a 23.77% stake in NYSE-listed Sociedad Quimica y Minera de Chile for US$4.1bn. The company posted a net profit of Rmb87m for the first nine months of 2019, an 83% decrease year on year, on revenue of Rmb1.2bn. Morgan Stanley Huaxin Securities was the sponsor and joint bookrunner with Huatai United Securities. The company is also planning a Hong Kong listing, with the majority of the proceeds to be used to refinance loans related to the acquisition, but there has been little progress on the float since it was given Chinese regulatory approval in November 2018. Based on the company’s A-share close of Rmb31.94 on January 8, the Hong Kong float of up to 328.3m H-shares could raise Rmb10.5bn. Morgan Stanley is working on the IPO with CLSA. Separately, Shenzhen-listed SEALAND SECURITIES is set to raise up to Rmb5bn from a 3-for-10 rights issue at Rmb3.25 each. Proceeds will be used to supplement the company’s capital base to expand its intermediary and asset management businesses. Guotai Junan Securities is the sponsor and joint bookrunner with Industrial Securities.


COUNTRY REPORT CHINA

› TWO SPIN-OFFS SET FOR STAR BOARD Hong Kong and Shanghai-listed SHANGHAI ELECTRIC GROUP plans to spin off its unit Shanghai Electric Windpower Equipment as a separately listed company on the Shanghai Star market. The proposed spin-off’s performance has been mixed in recent years. It posted a net loss of Rmb52m in 2018 against a net profit of Rmb21m in 2017. It then made a net profit of Rmb101m in the first nine months of 2019. The spin-off proposal still needs approval from shareholders and regulators in Hong Kong and China. SHANGHAI CONSTRUCTION GROUP plans to spin off subsidiary Shanghai Construction Material on the Star market. SCG said it meets the regulatory requirement for divesting spin-offs of having made profits in the last three years, with those cumulative profits exceeding the Rmb600m threshold set by the China Securities Regulatory Commission more than tenfold. The proposal still needs approval from shareholders and regulators.

› WEIGAO ORTHO PLANS A-SHARE IPO has started preparation work for an A-share IPO, according to Hong Kong listed parent company Shandong Weigao Group Medical Polymer. An announcement from Weigao Polymer said a financial adviser of Weigao Ortho made a submission on December 30 to the Shandong Regulatory Bureau of the China Securities Regulatory Commission regarding the application for the pre-listing tutoring process. The announcement does not mention which mainland stock exchange Weigao Ortho is planning to list on. Weigao Polymer has been trying to spin off Weigao Ortho for years. Weigao Ortho applied for a Hong Kong IPO in 2015 but the deal did not happen. Then in 2016, the company was looking at a backdoor listing in the A-share market through Shenzhenlisted Zhuhai Winbase International Chemical Tank Terminal but that deal also did not materialise. Weigao Ortho is a non-wholly owned subsidiary of Weigao Polymer and mainly engages in the production and sale of spine, trauma and joint orthopaedic implants.

SHANDONG WEIGAO ORTHOPAEDIC DEVICE

› YUNFENG TRIMS ALIBABA HEALTH STAKE Yunfeng Capital, a venture firm backed by Alibaba founder Jack Ma, has raised HK$791m through the sale of part of its

37% holding in ALIBABA HEALTH INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY. The deal, comprising 84m secondary shares or 0.7% of existing capital, was priced at the bottom of a HK$9.42–$9.52 range or at a discount of 4.6% to the company’s closing price of HK$9.87 last Wednesday. Yunfeng indirectly holds 10.95% of Alibaba Health through its fully owned subsidiary Innovare Tech, which acts in concert with Perfect Advance Holding (holding 25.82% of the company). In this transaction, the seller sold through Innovare Tech. There is a 45-day lock-up on the vendor. Goldman Sachs was the bookrunner.

› ZHENRO SERVICES PLANS HK IPO Chinese property management company ZHENRO SERVICES GROUP is looking to raise around US$100m–$150m from a Hong Kong IPO, according to people with knowledge of the matter. The company, which provides property management services to Hong Kong-listed Zhenro Properties Group, filed for an IPO to the Stock Exchange of Hong Kong on January 2. Headquartered in Shanghai, Zhenro Services has 136 projects under management in 34 cities in China, including residential properties, government and public facilities, office buildings, industrial parks and schools. Pre-IPO, Zonrong Ou, the controlling shareholder of Zhenro Properties Group, ultimately owns 87.3% of Zhenro Services Group. For the nine months ended September 30 2019, Zhenro Services made a profit of Rmb74.2m, up from Rmb28.5m a year earlier. It posted net profit of Rmb39.5m in 2018 on revenue of Rmb456m. CCB International is the sole sponsor.

companies to turn their domestic shares, which unlike A-shares are not normally tradable, into ordinary tradable shares. As such, the EBs will be initially secured by the net proceeds of the deal and eventually be replaced by the H-shares of Weigao Polymer by February 21 2020. Weigao will transfer its Polymer shares from onshore to offshore during this period. About 70% of the deal went to hedge funds and the remaining 30% to longonly investors. The top 10 investors took about two-thirds of the deal. Demand mainly came from Asia and there was also participation from Europe. Proceeds will be used for business expansion, working capital needs and general corporate purposes. Credit spread was assumed at 375bp, implied volatility at 19.3%, stock slippage at 7% and bond floor at 90.96. Credit Suisse was the bookrunner.

› FLAT GLASS GROUP CLEARS CB HEARING Hong Kong and Shanghai-listed FLAT GLASS GROUP has cleared a China Securities Regulatory Commission hearing for a proposed Rmb1.45bn six-year A-share convertible bond. Proceeds will be used to help fund a photovoltaic glass project in Anhui province at a cost of Rmb1.75bn. The company raised Rmb300m from a Shanghai IPO in February 2019. Guotai Junan Securities is the sponsor.

› MINSHENG BANK GETS CBIRC NOD FOR CB

Weigao Holding has taken advantage of a pilot share convertibility scheme to raise US$150m from the sale of an exchangeable bond with shares of SHANDONG WEIGAO GROUP MEDICAL POLYMER as the underlying. The five-year put-three EB was marketed at a coupon of 1%–2%, a yield to maturity of 1%–2% and an exchange premium of 25%–35%. It was priced at a coupon/yield to maturity of 2% and an exchange premium of 25%. Weigao Polymer is one of five companies approved by the China Securities Regulatory Commission in the H-share full circulation pilot scheme allowing major shareholders of Hong Kong-listed mainland

Hong Kong and Shanghai-listed CHINA MINSHENG BANK has won approval for a proposed Rmb50bn six-year convertible bond from the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission. Proceeds will be used to replenish core Tier 1 capital. The CB is still waiting for approval from the China Securities Regulatory Commission. Shenzhen-listed NEW HOPE LIUHE, which makes animal feed and meat products and also breeds livestock, has raised Rmb4bn from a six-year convertible bond. It sets the initial convertible price at Rmb19.78 each on the CB, which has received a AAA rating from United Rating. The CB pays an initial coupon of 0.2% in year one, stepping up each year to 2% in year six. The proceeds will fund eight pig breeding projects in seven Chinese cities. The company posted a net profit of Rmb2.72bn on revenue of Rmb69.1bn in 2018. China Merchants Securities is the sponsor,

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

37

› POLYMER EB BRINGS INNOVATION


and joint bookrunner with China Securities and Huatai United Securities. Separately, Shenzhen-listed WANDA FILM HOLDING, a subsidiary of Wanda Group, has withdrawn a proposed Rmb3.82bn CB offering because of an adjustment in the company’s fundraising plans and changes in the Chinese capital market environment. CICC was the sponsor. At the same time, Shenzhen-listed SHANXI MEIJIN ENERGY plans to raise Rmb3.2bn from a proposed six-year CB. The CB will pay an initial coupon of up to 0.2% each year. Proceeds will be used to manufacture new chemical materials. Shenzhen-listed HONGDA XINGYE has raised Rmb2.43bn from a six-year CB which began trading on January 8. First Capital Investment Banking is the sponsor. Hong Kong and Shanghai-listed SHENZHEN EXPRESSWAY has withdrawn a proposed Rmb2.2bn six-year convertible bond. The company extended the validity of the mandate for the issuance in February to December 27 2019, but it said it decided to cancel the offering because of changes in the external environment and the company’s situation. It did not elaborate. It had planned to use the proceeds to build toll roads. Its A-shares were up 0.4% at Rmb11.49 this afternoon, while its H-shares were down 0.2% at HK$11.42. China Merchants Securities is the sole bookrunner of the issue. Shenzhen-listed CHENGDU KANGHONG PHARMACEUTICAL GROUP has received the final approval from the China Securities Regulatory Commission for a proposed Rmb1.63bn convertible bond. Proceeds will be used for two ophthalmic drug and injection projects, to build an R&D centre and upgrade warehouses. BOC International Securities is the sponsor. Top bookrunners of Hong Kong dollar bonds, inc certificates of deposit, commercial paper 1/1/19 – 31/12/19 Amount Issues

HK$(m)

%

1 HSBC

Name

113

49,836.1

33.7

2 BoCom

18

28,891.6

19.5

3 Standard Chartered

36

15,783.8

10.7

4 Citigroup

10

5,968.6

4.0

5 Credit Agricole

14

5,484.0

3.7

6 CBA

12

5,445.8

3.7

7 Bank of China

8

4,138.0

2.8

8 BNP Paribas

20

3,438.0

2.3

9 Mizuho

4

3,061.1

2.1

5

2,089.9

1.4

10 ANZ Total

267 148,029.9

HONG KONG DEBT CAPITAL MARKETS › NWD SELLS BONDS TO FTLIFE Property developer and investor NEW WORLD DEVELOPMENT on December 24 sold HK$1.5bn (US$193m) 30-year senior unsecured bonds to FTLIFE INSURANCE. The fixed-rate notes pay 4.89% and were sold at par. The issue settled on December 31. NWD (MTN) is the issuer and NWD the guarantor. Hong Kong insurer FTLife Insurance is an indirect wholly owned subsidiary of NWS Holdings, in which NWD and its subsidiaries hold a 61% stake. FTLife considers the notes a good match for the long duration of its insurance contract liabilities, according to a Hong Kong exchange announcement by NWS.

ex-certificates of deposit, commercial paper 1/1/19 – 31/12/19 Amount Issues

HK$(m)

%

1 HSBC

Name

49

30,705.1

37.3

2 Standard Chartered

15

7,973.8

9.7

3 BoCom

6

6,291.6

7.7

4 Credit Agricole

10

3,484.0

4.2

5 Citigroup

8

3,468.6

4.2

6 Bank of China

6

3,308.3

4.0

7 CBA

4

2,718.3

3.3

8 BNP Paribas

12

2,288.0

2.8

9 ICBC

3

1,990.5

2.4

10 OCBC

3

1,638.3

2.0

Total

SYNDICATED LOANS

128

82,287.9

› H&H’S US$675M LOAN ATTRACTS 13 Thirteen lenders have joined a US$675mequivalent loan for paediatric nutritional products maker HEALTH AND HAPPINESS (H&H) INTERNATIONAL HOLDINGS that complements a US dollar bond issued last October. Goldman Sachs, HSBC and JP Morgan were the mandated lead arrangers and bookrunners of the four-year financing, which comprises a US$625m-equivalent term loan and a US$50m revolving credit facility. The loan, which was available in US and Australian dollars, paid a top-level all-in pricing of 179.86bp based on an opening interest margin of 160bp over Libor/BBSY and an average life of 3.775 years. Proceeds from the loan and the US$300m five-year non-call two bond refinance existing debt, including a US$425m bond due June 21 2021. The three leads on the loan also led the October bond which priced at par to yield 5.625%. The Reg S offering attracted orders for over US$2.8bn from 158 accounts. In September 2018, the company raised a US$450m-equivalent three-year senior secured loan via an indirect unit, Biostime Healthy Australia Investment. That loan paid a top-level all-in of 233.33bp via an initial margin of 200bp over Libor/BBSY that was tied to ratings from Moody’s and S&P. For full allocations, see www.ifre.com.

Proportional credit

Source: Refinitiv data

Deals

US$(m)

%

1 Bank of China

Name

37

10,195.1

11.3

2 HSBC

48

9,647.6

10.6

3 Standard Chartered

32

5,793.3

6.4

4 CCB

20

4,297.7

4.7

5 China Merchants Bank

16

4,033.6

4.5

6 Mizuho

20

3,771.1

4.2

7 DBS

17

3,645.4

4.0

8 BoCom

18

3,472.0

3.8

9 ICBC

15

2,941.3

3.2

10 Deutsche

9

2,789.4

3.1

Total

137

Proportional credit

Source: Refinitiv data

SDC Code: S9b

Hong Kong global equity and equity-related 1/1/19 – 31/12/19 Amount Name 1 Goldman Sachs

Issues

US$(m)

%

6

1,886.8

11.6

2 HSBC

5

1,431.1

8.8

3 Morgan Stanley

6

1,375.4

8.5

4 CICC

7

1,162.4

7.2

5 Citigroup

5

1,107.5

6.8

6 JP Morgan

3

983.5

6.1

7 BNP Paribas

3

912.0

5.6

8 Deutsche

2

868.2

5.4

9 Credit Suisse

5

759.3

4.7

2

728.7

4.5

10 Bank of America

Source: Refinitiv data

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

90,642.9

* Based on market of syndication and market total

Total SDC Code: AS5a

SDC Code: AS6

Top bookrunners of Hong Kong syndicated loans 1/1/19 – 31/12/19 Amount

› HANG LUNG DEBUTS GREEN LOAN

Proportional credit

38

Top bookrunners of Hong Kong dollar bonds,

*Market volume

*Market volume

Source: Refinitiv data

Hong Kong-listed developer HANG LUNG has obtained a maiden HK$1bn (US$128m) green loan facility, according to a company announcement on December 23. OCBC Bank Hong Kong branch provided the financing, of which the proceeds will be used to finance commercial property development projects in Mainland China.

PROPERTIES

119

16,232.9


COUNTRY REPORT HONG KONG

“We are proud to support Hang Lung’s ambition of spearheading green developments in Hong Kong and Mainland China,” said Tan Wing Ming, regional general manager for North-East Asia of OCBC Bank. “This green loan is the latest sustainable finance transaction to come out of OCBC Hong Kong branch and positions the bank well to capture the growing green finance opportunity in the Greater Bay Area.” The assets have received gold certifications or pre-certifications from the US Green Building Council of Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design. The green loan is issued under Hang Lung’s green finance framework, which outlines the criteria and guidelines that will be used in the allocation of the proceeds in line with the 2018 Green Bond Principles and 2018 Green Loan Principles.

› LONGFOR SIGNS SELF-ARRANGED CLUB Chinese developer LONGFOR GROUP HOLDINGS has obtained a HK$8.75bn five-year club loan from nine lenders. Agricultural Bank of China Hong Kong branch, Bank of China (Hong Kong), Bank of East Asia, China Citic Bank International, China Construction Bank (Asia), China Everbright Bank, CMB Wing Lung Bank, Hang Seng Bank and HSBC are the lenders of the self-arranged facility, which offers an interest margin of 195bp over Hibor.

Proceeds are for refinancing and general corporate purposes. The Hong Kong-listed developer’s previous visit to the market was in January last year when it obtained a HK$15.3bn five-year bullet term loan from 12 banks. That self-arranged facility offered an all-in pricing of 205bp based on an interest margin of 172bp over Hibor. Longfor Group changed its name from Longfor Properties in June 2018. The company has projects in 40 cities in China and is rated Baa3/BBB/BBB.

› TOM GROUP SIGNS HK$3.7BN CLUB Media company TOM GROUP has obtained a HK$3.7bn three-year facility, returning to the market after a two-year hiatus. Bank of America, Bank of China Hong Kong branch, Citigroup, DBS Bank, Hang Seng Bank, HSBC, Industrial and Commercial Bank of China and United Overseas Bank are the lenders on the deal, which closed as a club. The financing comprises a HK$2.5bn term loan and HK$1.2bn revolving credit facility. Proceeds raised are for refinancing and general corporate purposes. The borrower last raised a HK$3.2bn three-year loan in December 2017, according to LPC data. Bank of China Hong Kong branch, Citigroup, DBS Bank, HSBC, ICBC and UOB were lenders of that club deal, which comprised a HK$2.5bn term

loan and HK$700m revolver. A subsidiary of CK Hutchison Holdings, Tom Group is a technology and media company that is listed on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange. For full allocations, see www.ifre.com.

› AMVIG HOLDINGS SIGNS HK$1.15BN REFI Hong Kong-listed cigarette packaging maker AMVIG HOLDINGS has closed a HK$1.15bn one-year loan with 10 other lenders joining in syndication. ANZ was the mandated lead arranger and bookrunner for the facility, while Bank Sinopac Hong Kong branch, China Citic Bank International, Chong Hing Bank, Commonwealth Bank of Australia Hong Kong branch, CTBC Bank, Fubon Bank Hong Kong branch, MUFG, Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp, Taipei Fubon Commercial Bank and United Overseas Bank joined as lead arrangers. The deal paid an all-in pricing of 170bp based on an interest margin of 150bp. Proceeds refinance a HK$1.6bn three-year bullet loan completed in January 2017. ANZ underwrote that loan, which attracted 13 lenders in senior syndication. The borrowing is split into a HK$1.03bn term loan, a HK$450m revolving credit facility and a HK$120m-equivalent CNH term loan paying margins of 150bp over Hibor for the Hong Kong dollar portions and a fixed interest rate of 5% for the CNH tranche.

ARE YOUR COLLEAGUES AS WELL-INFORMED AS YOU? COMPANY- OR DEPARTMENT-WIDE SUBSCRIPTIONS TO IFR Asia As a subscriber to IFR Asia, you will already be aware of its standing as the world’s leading source of Asian capital markets coverage. But are your colleagues? If there are other people in your team, department or company who, you think, would benefit from the authoritative and independent content that IFR Asia offers, you should know that considerable discounts are available to companies with multiple subscriptions. To discuss your requirements, please email to IFR.Clientsupport@refinitiv.com or contact: Asia-Pacific and Japan: +852 291 26606 EMEA: +44 (0)20 7542 4569 Americas: +1 (646) 223 5543

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

39


INDIA DEBT CAPITAL MARKETS › MANAPPURAM SELLS MAIDEN BOND last Monday sold US$300m of three-year bonds priced at par to yield 5.9%, inside initial guidance of 6.25% area. The deal attracted over US$1.15bn of orders from 116 accounts. Asset and fund managers were allocated 87%, private banks 8% and banks 5%. Asia accounted for 76% with EMEA making up the balance of 24%. The Reg S senior unsecured bonds have expected ratings of BB–/BB– (S&P/Fitch), in line with the issuer. UBS was sole global coordinator and joint bookrunner with Barclays. The Indian finance company will issue the debut dollar bonds off a US$750m EMTN programme.

MANAPPURAM FINANCE

› SHRIRAM TRANSPORT PRINTS SOCIAL Indian non-bank lender SHRIRAM TRANSPORT FINANCE drew final orders of over US$2bn from 172 accounts for its US$500m social bond issue. The 3.5-year US dollar 144A/Reg S senior secured social bond was priced at par to yield 5.10%, inside initial guidance of 5.375% area. The US took 50%, Asia 37% and EMEA 13% of the deal. Fund managers took 85%, insurers 5%, private banks 5%, and banks and others 5%. The proposed bonds are expected to be rated BB+/BB+ (S&P/Fitch), in line with the issuer. Barclays, BNP Paribas, Citigroup, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, Emirates NBD Capital, HSBC, ING, JP Morgan and Standard Chartered were joint bookrunners and lead managers.

› POWER FINANCE MULLS 144A/REG S BOND Indian state-owned POWER FINANCE CORP, rated Baa3/BBB– (Moody’s/Fitch), began fixed income investor meetings and conference calls in Asia, Europe and the US on January 9 for a proposed benchmark-sized 144A/Reg S US dollar bond offering. It plans to issue bonds with an up to 10.5-year bullet maturity and/or a 10-year amortizing bond with an average maturity of 8.0 years. The bonds will be issued off the company’s US$5bn global MTN programme. Barclays, MUFG and Standard Chartered

40

Bank are joint lead managers and joint bookrunners.

› LALITPUR POWER EYES DOLLAR BOND

Top lead managers of Indian rupee bonds 1/1/19 – 31/12/19 Amount Name 1 Axis

LALITPUR POWER GENERATION, which is owned by Indian conglomerate Bajaj Group, has mandated banks to arrange investor meetings for a proposed US dollar benchmark Reg S/144A amortising bond offering with a 10-year door-to-door tenor and weighted average life of 7.37 years. Barclays is the sole global coordinator and bookrunner, while Emirates NBD Capital and SBICAP are joint lead managers of the senior secured notes. The bond has expected ratings of Ba3/BB+ (Moody’s/Fitch). Investor meetings took place in Asia, Europe and the US from January 8.

› INDIA EXIM BANK RAISES US$1BN (Baa2/BBB–/BBB–) priced US$1bn of 3.25% 10-year bonds on January 6 at Treasuries plus 150bp, inside initial guidance of Treasuries plus 175bp area. The 144A/Reg S bond priced at 99.543 to yield 3.304%. The deal received orders of over US$2.7bn from 184 accounts. Asia took 44% of the notes, followed by the US with 36% and EMEA with 20%. By investor type, fund managers took 58%, banks 18%, insurance and pension firms 13%, central banks and official institutions 10% and private banks 1%. There is a change of control put option if the Indian government owns less than 51% of the issuer. Proceeds will be used for funding export credit and foreign currency loans. Barclays, Citigroup, HSBC, JP Morgan, MUFG and Standard Chartered were lead managers.

EXPORT-IMPORT BANK OF INDIA

› FUTURE RETAIL MEETS INVESTORS Indian retailer FUTURE RETAIL, rated BB–/ BB (S&P/Fitch), has mandated banks to meet investors on a proposed US dollar benchmark Reg S/144A offering of senior secured notes. Deutsche Bank, Standard Chartered Bank, Barclays, JP Morgan and UBS are joint global coordinators as well as joint lead managers and bookrunners with SBICAP, Credit Suisse, Emirates NBD Capital and Rabobank. The banks arranged investor meetings in Asia, the US and Europe from January 7.

› ADITYA BIRLA FINANCE FILES SHELF ADITYA BIRLA FINANCE has filed a draft shelf prospectus with the market regulator to

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

Issues

Rs(m)

%

174

829,068.6

17.6

2 ICICI Bank

169

788,363.0

16.7

3 Trust Group

168

434,766.4

9.2

4 HDFC

141

424,519.3

9.0

5 AK Capital

130

381,879.5

8.1

6 Yes Bank

107

330,262.7

7.0

7 Kotak Mahindra

94

253,563.0

5.4

8 Tipsons

88

225,411.3

4.8

9 Edelweiss Financial

47

203,479.4

4.3

10 Punjab National Bank

60

152,835.6

3.2

Total

319 4,725,084.1

*Market volume Proportional credit

Source: Refinitiv data

SDC Code: AS23

raise up to Rs50bn (US$701m) from a public issue of bonds, according to a filing on BSE. The non-banking financial company will issue the secured and unsecured bonds in one or more tranches. The unsecured bonds will be issued as subordinated debt and will be eligible for inclusion as Tier 2 capital. Icra and India Ratings have assigned a AAA (stable) rating to the bonds. Edelweiss Financial Services and AK Capital Financial Services are the lead arrangers.

› ALLAHABAD BANK ISSUES TIER 2 BONDS has raised Rs15bn (US$211m) from 10-year Basel III-compliant Tier 2 bonds at 9.53%, according to a filing on National Securities Depository Limited. The bonds have a call option after five years. Crisil and India Ratings have assigned ratings of AA– with positive implications to the notes. On September 16, the board of Allahabad Bank approved a merger proposal with Indian Bank. AK Capital, ICICI Securities Primary Dealership, Pioneer Investcorp, Tipsons Consultancy Services and Trust Investment Advisors are the lead arrangers for the bond issue.

ALLAHABAD BANK

› BANK OF BARODA RAISES TIER 2 CAPITAL BANK OF BARODA has raised Rs9.2bn from 10year non-call five Basel III-compliant Tier 2 bonds at 7.44%. The bonds have a call option at the end of five years and every year after that. It was eyeing Rs2.5bn plus a greenshoe option of Rs7.5bn. Care and India Ratings have assigned AAA ratings to the bonds. On December 16, Bank of Baroda raised Rs17.47bn from non-call five AT1 bonds at 8.99%.


COUNTRY REPORT INDIA

› FCI ISSUES 10-YEAR BONDS AT 7.6%

› NABARD SEALS 15-YEAR DEAL AT 7.57%

FOOD CORPORATION OF INDIA has raised Rs52.62bn from 10-year bonds at 7.6%, according to market sources. It was eyeing Rs10bn, plus a greenshoe option of Rs42.62bn. Crisil and Care have assigned a AAA (credit enhancement) rating to the bonds on the back of a government of India guarantee. FCI is yet to make an official announcement on the planned bond sale.

NATIONAL BANK FOR AGRICULTURE AND RURAL

› HDFC TARGETS FIVE-YEAR BONDS AT 7.5%

DEVELOPMENT has raised Rs7.09bn from 15year bonds at 7.57%. Crisil and India Ratings assigned a AAA rating to the bonds. On December 26, Nabard raised Rs10.08bn from 15-year government of India-serviced bonds at 7.46%, payable semiannually.

› NHAI ISSUES 30-YEAR BONDS AT 7.98% has raised Rs50bn from 30-year bonds at 7.98%. The state-owned issuer was eyeing Rs50bn plus a greenshoe amount of Rs5bn. Crisil, India Ratings and Care have assigned a AAA rating to the bonds. On December 9, it raised Rs30bn from 15-year bonds at 7.87%.

NATIONAL HIGHWAYS AUTHORITY OF INDIA

is targeting up to Rs50bn from five-year bonds at 7.5%, according to a filing on BSE. It is eyeing Rs30bn, plus a greenshoe option of Rs20bn. Axis Bank is the arranger for the deal. Crisil and Icra have assigned AAA ratings to the bonds. On December 27, HDFC raised Rs25.5bn from three-year bonds at 7.21%. HOUSING DEVELOPMENT FINANCE CORP

› INDIABULLS INFRAESTATE PAYS 10.85% has raised Rs3.5bn from three-year bonds at 10.85%. The notes are rated AA– (credit enhancement) by Infomerics Valuation and Rating.

INDIABULLS INFRAESTATE

› IRFC ISSUES APRIL 2030 BONDS has issued Rs15.8bn bonds maturing on April 12 2030 at 7.55%. Crisil, Icra and Care have assigned AAA ratings to the secured bonds.

INDIAN RAILWAY FINANCE CORP

› MANAPPURAM PRICES TWO-YEAR NOTE has raised Rs3.5bn from two-year notes at 9.75%. The bonds of the non-bank finance company, which mainly lends against gold jewellery and ornaments, are rated AA by Crisil. The board approved the issuance of non-convertible debentures via a private placement on December 26.

MANAPPURAM FINANCE

› MUTHOOT FINCORP EYES RETAIL BONDS has filed a draft shelf prospectus with the market regulator to raise up to Rs4.8bn from a public issue of bonds. It is eyeing Rs2.5bn with an option to retain oversubscription up to Rs2.3bn. Brickwork and Crisil have assigned respective A+ and A ratings to the bonds. SMC Capitals is the lead manager.

› NHPC PRINTS 10-YEAR PAPER AT 7.38% NHPC has raised Rs5bn from 10-year bonds in separately transferable redeemable principal part (STRPP) format at 7.38%, according to a market source. The bonds are redeemable from the sixth to 10th year. The Indian hydropower company was targeting Rs2.5bn plus a greenshoe amount of Rs2.5bn. The secured bonds are rated AAA by Icra and India Ratings.

› PFC RAISES RS14BN has raised Rs14bn from three-year three-month and seven-day bonds at 7.04%. It has raised Rs3.6bn plus a greenshoe of Rs10.4bn which is reserved for inclusion in the Bharat Bond ETF, India’s first exchange traded fund that started trading on the BSE and NSE today. The bonds mature on April 14 2023. Crisil, Icra and Care have assigned a AAA rating to the bonds. On December 31, PFC raised Rs47.11bn from 10yr bonds at 7.93%.

POWER FINANCE CORP

› PGC ISSUES RS7BN TWO-PART BONDS

MUTHOOT FINCORP

has raised Rs7bn from two-tranche bonds, according to a market source. It printed Rs2bn April 14 2023 notes at 6.35% and Rs5bn April 12 2030 bonds at 7.38%. Crisil, Icra and Care have assigned a AAA rating to the bonds.

POWER GRID CORPORATION OF INDIA

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

PGC is yet to make an official announcement.

› PIRAMAL STRENGTHENS BALANCE SHEET has received board approval to raise up to Rs27.5bn from bonds in one or more tranches. On December 19, the Indian pharmaceutical and financial services company raised Rs17.5bn via a preferential allotment of compulsory convertible debentures to Caisse de Dépôt et Placement du Québec (CDPQ). Ivanhoe Cambridge, a unit of the Canadian institutional investor, also committed US$250m towards a coinvestment vehicle with Piramal to provide long-term equity to residential developers. “This infusion of funds will strengthen our balance sheet and also enable us to tap both organic and inorganic growth opportunities that continue to emerge in the current market dynamics across the sectors and the markets that we operate in,” said Ajay Piramal, chairman of Piramal Enterprises in a release. The company will also raise Rs36.5bn from a rights issue at Rs1,300 per share, which will be 90% underwritten by the controlling shareholders. The record date is December 31. In April, Icra revised the outlook for Piramal Enterprises to negative due to high debt levels associated with financial services assets and related subsidiaries such as Piramal Capital and Housing Finance. The rating revision factored in funding challenges for non-banking financial companies. Piramal’s predominantly wholesale book, with large exposures in real estate and infrastructure segment, was concerning, Icra said.

PIRAMAL ENTERPRISES

› PNB PRINTS 10-YEAR T2 BONDS AT 8.15% PUNJAB NATIONAL BANK has raised Rs15bn from 10-year Basel III-compliant Tier 2 bonds at 8.15%, according to a filing on National Securities Depository Limited. It was eyeing Rs7.5bn plus a greenshoe option of the same amount. Crisil has assigned an AA+ rating to the bonds with developing implications because the merger of PNB with Oriental Bank of Commerce and United Bank of India is yet to be completed.

› REC TAPS ONSHORE MARKET TWICE REC, formerly known as Rural Electrification Corp, raised Rs25bn from two-part bonds in early January, according to market sources. The state-owned issuer sold Rs14bn of

41


bonds maturing on March 31 2023 at 7.12% and Rs11bn of notes due on March 31 2030 at 7.89%. Crisil, Icra and Care have assigned AAA ratings to the unsecured bonds. On December 26, REC raised Rs20.9bn from three-year five-day bonds at 7.24%. It was eyeing Rs5bn plus a greenshoe amount of Rs25bn. REC is yet to make an official announcement on the bond sales.

› TWO NBFCS EYE PUBLIC BONDS and MUTHOOT have filed draft shelf prospectuses with the market regulator to raise a total of Rs4.5bn from public issues of bonds. Edelweiss Finance is eyeing up to Rs2.5bn from retail bonds rated AA– by Care and Crisil. IDBI Capital and Edelweiss Financial are the lead managers. Muthoot Mini Financiers is targeting Rs2bn from a public issue of bonds rated BBB– by Care. Vivro Financial is the lead arranger.

of 315bp over Euribor and 343bp over sterling Libor, respectively. The Singapore unit had raised a US$1.5bn dual-tranche financing, split into a US$700m five-year tranche A and an US$800m seven-year tranche B, and paid a top-level all-in of 327bp based on margins of 280bp and 315bp over Libor, respectively. Tata Steel signed a US$525m six-year club loan last year with nine lenders for capital expenditure purposes.

› BIRLA CARBON PICKS 16 ON BORROWING

› SYNDICATED LOANS › TATA STEEL MANDATES 18 BANKS has mandated 18 banks on a €1.75bn (US$1.95bn) dual-tranche facility which is expected to launch into limited syndication this month. The mandated banks are: ANZ, Axis Bank, Bank of America, Barclays, Bank of Baroda, BNP Paribas, Credit Agricole CIB, First Abu Dhabi Bank, HSBC, IndusInd Bank, ING Bank, Kotak Mahindra Bank, Mashreqbank, MUFG, Standard Chartered Bank, State Bank of India, Syndicate Bank and Union Bank of India. Tata Steel Netherlands Holding is the borrower on the bullet loan, which is split into five and six-year tranches and will carry a letter of comfort from Tata Steel. Proceeds will be used to refinance debt raised in 2014. The Dutch subsidiary, along with Singapore-incorporated Tata Steel Global Holdings, raised a US$3.095bn-equivalent multi-tranche loan in October 2014. Sixteen banks were the MLABs of that borrowing, while another 18 joined in syndication. The borrowings for the Dutch subsidiary included a €370m (US$470m then) fiveyear bullet term tranche A1, a £700m (US$1.125bn then) six-year bullet revolver tranche B1 and a separate €1.88bn sevenyear loan from six Indian lenders. Tranches A1 and B1 paid top-level all-in pricing of 358bp based on interest margins TATA STEEL

42

Name 1 State Bank of India

has mandated 16 banks on a US$1.5bn multi-tranche loan for refinancing. The mandated banks are: ANZ, Axis Bank, Bank of America, Bank of Baroda, BNP Paribas, Citigroup, Credit Agricole CIB, DBS Bank, Export Development Canada, First Abu Dhabi Bank, ICICI Bank, ING Bank, JP Morgan, Mizuho Bank, Standard Chartered Bank and Union Bank of India. The financing – slated to launch in January – comprises a US$400m three-year term loan (tranche A), a US$250m five-year piece (tranche B1), a US$100m five-year revolving credit facility (tranche B2) and a US$750m seven-year portion (tranche C). The borrower, a unit of conglomerate Aditya Birla Group, had sent out a term-sheet to over 20 banks in October requesting proposals for the financing. Proceeds will refinance a US$1.2bn dualtranche loan completed in July 2018. Nine banks had first been mandated on that borrowing, which started at a US$600m size in early March last year. The nine banks were ANZ, Axis, BNP, CA CIB, Citi, DBS, ICICI, Mizuho and StanChart. JP Morgan and SG Asia joined subsequently. Six other banks joined later and the loan was closed without being launched into senior and general syndication. At the time Birla Carbon had also eyed a US$600m bond to complement the loan, but scrapped it and doubled the size of the loan following unfavourable bond market conditions. The 2018 loan comprised a US$1.05bn 30month term loan and a US$150m 30-month revolving credit, each paying interest margins of 135bp over Libor. BIRLA CARBON

› ONGC VIDESH SEEKS UP TO US$1BN REFI State-owned ONGC VIDESH is looking to raise up to US$1bn for refinancing. The overseas unit of Oil and Natural Gas Corp has sent a request for proposals for a US$500m five-year bullet loan with a greenshoe of up to US$500m. The deadline for responses is January 15. International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

Deals 10

US$(m)

%

11,431.3 35.0

2 Axis

18

3,949.6

12.1

3 Yes Bank

50

2,886.0

8.8

4 Standard Chartered

20

2,058.0

6.3

5 Indusind-Bank

15

1,384.0

4.2

6 ICICI Bank

9

1,344.7

4.1

7 Westpac

4

1,163.7

3.6

8 L&T Financial Services

11

1,099.2

3.4

9 First Abu Dhabi Bank

8

678.5

2.1

6

624.1

1.9

10 MUFG Total

EDELWEISS FINANCE & INVESTMENTS MINI FINANCIERS

Top bookrunners of India syndicated loans 1/1/19 – 31/12/19 Amount

139

32,676.9

* Based on market of syndication and market total Proportional credit

Source: Refinitiv data

SDC Code: S10b

Proceeds will be used to refinance a US$ 1.775bn five-year facility completed in March 2016. That deal paid a top-level all-in pricing of 111.06bp based on a margin of 95bp over Libor and a remaining life of 4.67 years. Last September the company raised a US$500m five-year term loan that paid a top-level all-in pricing of 105bp via an interest margin of 100bp over Libor and an average life of 4.75 years. Parent ONGC provided a guarantee. ANZ, Bank of India and Westpac Banking Corp were the mandated lead arrangers and bookrunners, while nine others joined.

› NTPC PICKS THREE FOR INCREASED LOAN India’s largest power utility, NTPC, has mandated three banks for a dual-tranche loan of up to US$750m-equivalent, nearly double the previously flagged size. Bank of India, State Bank of India and Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp will provide the equivalent of US$100m, US$375m and US$275m respectively. The borrowing will be split into a sevenyear tranche for 75% of the total size and a 10-year portion for the remainder. The utility’s request for proposals in October was initially for an unsecured term loan denominated in yen with a base size of US$100m-equivalent and a greenshoe option of up to US$300m. Proceeds from the loan will finance capital expenditure for new coal-fired stations as well as operating power plants and repayment of Indian rupee loans borrowed onshore previously for the existing projects. In April last year, the borrower closed a US$300m-equivalent 10-year Samurai loan to a poor response with only Aozora Bank joining the financing in general syndication. Mizuho Bank, MUFG and SMBC were the


COUNTRY REPORT INDIA

mandated lead arrangers and bookrunners of that financing, which offered a top-level all-in pricing of 114.5bp based on an interest margin of 102bp over Tibor and weighted average remaining life of 10 years. The poor response was despite the loan paying richer pricing than a ¥39.42bn (then US$370m) financing completed in April 2018. That loan offered a top-level all-in pricing of 105bp based on a margin of 95bp over Tibor and a weighted average remaining life of 10 years. Mizuho, MUFG and SMBC were the MLABs of the loan, which attracted eight lenders in general syndication.

› LIC HOUSING VENTURES OFFSHORE has picked four banks for a US$200m three-year loan, marking its return to the offshore loan market after 16 years. The Indian non-bank financial company has signed a facility agreement with DBS Bank, MUFG, Standard Chartered Bank and Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp for the borrowing. LIC Housing Finance last tapped the offshore market in June 2003 for a US$50m five-year loan that paid a top-level all-in of 107bp. ABN AMRO Bank, DBS and State Bank of India were the arrangers on the transaction that paid a top-level all-in of 107bp based on an interest margin of 95bp over six-month Libor.

LIC HOUSING FINANCE

› HPCL RETURNS FOR US$500M LOAN has sent out a request for proposals for a five-year financing of up to US$500m, returning to the offshore loan markets after 18 months. Proceeds from the new money financing, which includes a greenshoe option of US$200m, will be used for general corporate purposes. HPCL closed a US$300m three-year bullet loan in June 2018 as a four-bank club. DBS Bank, Mizuho Bank, MUFG and State Bank of India ended up with equal commitments after pre-funding the deal. That loan pays an interest margin of 60bp–65bp over Libor.

HINDUSTAN PETROLEUM

› NINE BANKS JOIN CITIUSTECH LBO LOAN Nine banks have joined in senior syndication a US$265m five-year loan supporting Baring Private Equity Asia’s leveraged buyout of healthcare-focused IT services provider CITIUSTECH. DBS Bank, Goldman Sachs, ING Bank and Nomura were the mandated lead arrangers, bookrunners and equal underwriters of the amortising loan, which pays an interest margin of 400bp over Libor.

The loan has an average life of around 4.7 years and represents an opening leverage of low five times based on the Ebitda for the last 12 months. The gearing is expected to reduce to around 4.5 times by the end of March 2020 given the company’s strong Ebitda margins of high 20% and the niche sector it operates in. BPEA has completed the acquisition of the nearly 80% stake in CitiusTech for around US$757m. CitiusTech has six offices each in the US and India. It provides services including healthcare software development, regulatory compliance, analytics and population health management, among others, to medical technology companies and life sciences organisations, according to its website. For full allocations, see www.ifre.com.

EQUITY CAPITAL MARKETS › MINDSPACE REIT FILES FOR IPO MINDSPACE BUSINESS PARKS REIT,

owned by real estate developer K Raheja (85%) and Blackstone (15%), has filed the draft prospectus for an IPO of Rs40bn (US$560m) and is targeting a launch in March. The offer will comprise primary shares for Rs10bn and an undisclosed number of secondary shares, according to the draft prospectus. K Raheja and Blackstone are the vendors of the secondary shares. The REIT has commercial properties with a total leasable area of 29.5 million square feet. As of June 30, this consisted of 19.8 million square feet of completed area, 6.1 million square feet of under construction area and 3.6 million square feet of future development area. The properties are located in the Indian cities of Mumbai, Pune, Hyderabad and Chennai. The REIT reported revenue of Rs16.7bn in the financial year to March 31 2019 compared to Rs15bn in the previous fiscal year. Net profit rose to Rs5.1bn from Rs1.6bn during the same period. The deal would be India’s second REIT listing after Embassy Office Parks REIT. Axis, Ambit, Bank of America, Citigroup, CLSA, HDFC Bank, ICICI Securities, IDFC Bank, JM Financial, Kotak, Morgan Stanley, Nomura and UBS are the lead managers.

› PARK HOTELS FILES IPO PROSPECTUS has filed the draft prospectus for an IPO of up to Rs10bn and is targeting a launch by March. The offer will comprise primary shares

APEEJAY SURRENDRA PARK HOTELS

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

India equity and equity-related 1/1/19 – 31/12/19 Amount Name

Issues

US$(m)

%

1 Bank of America

7

2,735.6

12.8

2 Morgan Stanley

8

2,073.4

9.7

3 JP Morgan

6

1,848.7

8.7 8.0

4 ICICI Bank

13

1,708.1

5 Axis

15

1,539.7

7.2

6 Kotak Mahindra

10

1,382.9

6.5

7 Goldman Sachs

6

1,310.9

6.1

8 Citigroup

9

1,284.8

6.0

9 HSBC

6

1,195.9

5.6

5

1,092.3

5.1

131

21,359.2

10 State Bank of India Total Source: Refinitiv data

SDC Code: C1L

for Rs4bn and Rs6bn of secondary shares. Controlling shareholders Apeejay Surrendra Trust, Apeejay House and Apeejay Private are among the vendors. The Park Hotels is part of the Apeejay Surrendra Group which has interests in tea, hospitality, shipping, real estate, retail and financial services.The company runs hotels under the brands “The Park” and “Zone by The Park” In the financial year to March 31 2019, the company’s total income was Rs4.31bn compared to Rs3.88bn in 2018. Operating profit rose to Rs927m from Rs791m during the same period. Axis, JM Financial and ICICI Securities are the banks on the transaction.

› RELIANCE RETAIL PROPOSES SHARE SWAP RELIANCE RETAIL has proposed allowing minority shareholders to exchange shares for those of its parent as it has no current plan to list on local stock exchanges. Earlier last year, Mukesh Ambani, chairman of parent company Reliance Industries, had told shareholders at the company’s annual general meeting that he planned to list the subsidiary in the next five years. Shareholders will get one Reliance Industries share for every four Reliance Retail shares. In a notice, Reliance Retail said it had received requests from employees holding its shares to give them options to exit and liquidate their stock. Reliance Retail Ventures, a subsidiary of Reliance Industries, owns 4.99bn shares or 99.95% of Reliance Retail’s capital, while employees own 2.5m shares or 0.05%. Reliance Industries’ current market capitalisation is Rs9.8trn and the swap ratio values Reliance Retail at Rs2.45trn. “This scheme enables the specified shareholders to continue to participate in the growth of the retail business, as

43


hitherto, since the company is an indirect subsidiary of Reliance Industries,” Reliance Retail said. Founded in 2006, Reliance Retail operates India’s largest chain of neighbourhood stores, Reliance Fresh, as well as supermarkets, wholesale cash and carry, and specialty stores. It has over 10,000 points of sale. The company’s gross sales were Rs412bn in the second quarter of the financial year that ends on March 31 2020, up from Rs324bn in the same quarter of 2018. Operating profit rose to Rs23bn from Rs14bn during the same period.

› ROUTE MOBILE TARGETS FEBRUARY IPO Cloud communications provider ROUTE MOBILE plans to launch an up to Rs6bn IPO as early as February, people with knowledge of the transaction said. According to the company’s draft prospectus, the offer will comprise Rs2.4bn of primary shares and Rs3.6bn of secondary shares. Controlling shareholders Sandip Kumar Gupta, a non-executive director, and Rajdip Kumar Gupta, managing director and group CEO, are the vendors of the secondary shares. The company’s revenue rose to Rs8.5bn in the financial year to March 31 2019 from Rs5.1bn in 2018. Net profit climbed to Rs557m from Rs473m during the same period. Founded in 2004 in Mumbai, Route Mobile provides cloud communication services to clients in the banking, financial services, retail and aviation industries. Axis, Edelweiss and ICICI Securities are the banks on the transaction.

INDONESIA DEBT CAPITAL MARKETS › BANK TABUNGAN NEGARA PLANS T2 BOND BANK TABUNGAN NEGARA, rated Baa2 (stable) by Moody’s, has hired banks for a proposed offering of US dollar-denominated subordinated Basel III-compliant Tier 2 capital securities, subject to market conditions. Citigroup, HSBC and Standard Chartered Bank are joint bookrunners and joint lead managers on the Reg S issue. The Indonesian lender will meet investors in Singapore and Hong Kong and hold investor calls with London starting on Monday.

44

The proposed bonds are expected to be rated Ba3 by Moody’s.

› BAYAN RESOURCES HIRES FOR BOND Coal miner BAYAN RESOURCES has mandated Deutsche Bank and Morgan Stanley as joint global coordinators, lead managers and bookrunners for a proposed US dollar 144A/ Reg S senior bond offering. The notes have expected ratings of Ba3/ BB– (Moody’s/Fitch). The bookrunners arranged investor meetings and calls in Hong Kong, Singapore, London, New York and Boston from January 9.

Bayan is the fourth-largest coal producer in Indonesia, according to a company presentation.

› MEDCO ENERGI KICKS OFF MEETINGS MEDCO ENERGI INTERNASIONAL,

rated B1/B+/ B+, has hired banks for a proposed 144A/ Reg S offering of US dollar-denominated senior fixed-rate notes, subject to market conditions. Morgan Stanley, Standard Chartered Bank, Societe Generale, Credit Suisse, DBS Bank and Mandiri Securities are joint lead managers and joint bookrunners. The Indonesian integrated energy and

Indonesia makes swift return Bonds Sovereign’s US$3.1bn-equivalent deal finds warm reception The REPUBLIC OF INDONESIA took advantage of robust new year appetite from investors to replenish its depleted coffers with its second global bond in little over two months. The US$3.1bn-equivalent deal, comprising a euro seven-year and two US dollar tranches of 10 and 30 years, follows a similar offering in late October, when it raised US$2.1bn from dollar and euro bonds. “They are either very lucky or they had it perfectly timed,” one regional syndication banker not on the deal said last Wednesday. “Seriously, the timing could not have been better as market sentiment has dipped today following this morning’s missile strikes by Iran on US air bases in Iraq.” The sovereign on Tuesday sold US$1.2bn 10-year SEC-registered senior unsecured bonds at 2.88% and US$800m 30-year notes at 3.55%, both well inside respective initial price guidance of 3.125% area and 3.75% area. Demand was robust with over US$5.9bn of orders across both tranches, underscoring the popularity of the Indonesian credit. The 10-year tranche attracted over US$3.6bn of orders from 142 accounts, dominated by real money accounts. Asset and fund managers took 60% of the deal, banks 31%, central banks, pension funds and sovereign wealth funds 5%, insurance companies 3% and private banks and others the remaining 1%. The note was well distributed geographically with Asia accounting for 42%, EMEA 23% and the US 35%. The 30-year tranche drew more than US$2.3bn of orders from 124 accounts, with asset and fund managers allocated 59%, banks 21%, insurers 11%, central banks, pension funds and sovereign wealth funds 8% and private banks and others 1%. Asia

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

accounted for 40%, EMEA 36% and the US 24%. “The two US dollar tranches yielded zero new issue concession based on the sovereign’s own curve,” said one banker close to the deal. Indonesia’s 3.4% September 2029s were quoted at 2.864% while the 3.7% October 2049s were seen at 3.543%. Taking the slightly longer maturity into account, the new bonds paid negligible premiums. The new notes traded up in cash price with the 2030s indicated at 99.75/99.875 on Wednesday, just a touch up from the issue price of 99.73, while the 2050s were at 100.10/100.25, up from the issue price of 99.077. A €1bn (US$1.1bn) 0.9% long seven-year tranche was priced at 103bp over mid-swaps, tightening from initial price guidance of 130bp. The tranche came about 1bp through fair value, which was seen at 104 based on the outstanding bonds due 2026 which were quoted at 103. “Despite geopolitical tensions, the euro deal was well received,” said a European banker. “There’s a lot of liquidity now - if you are an IG or well-known issuer, now is the time to do an opportunistic issuance.” The fundraising will ease the government’s budget deficit burden. It recently announced a revenue shortfall of nearly US$15bn last year as a slowdown in the economy began to hit fiscal revenues. The new notes settle on January 14. Citigroup, Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs, Mandiri Securities and Societe Generale were joint bookrunners. Danareksa Sekuritas and Trimegah Sekuritas Indonesia were comanagers. KIT YIN BOEY


COUNTRY REPORT INDONESIA

Top bookrunners of Indonesian rupiah bonds 1/1/19 – 31/12/19 Amount Name

Issues

1 Indo Premier Sec

71

2 Bank Mandiri 3 Danareksa

Top bookrunners of Indonesia syndicated loans 1/1/19 – 31/12/19 Amount

Rp(m)

%

Name

Indonesia global equity and equity-related 1/1/19 – 31/12/19 Amount

Deals

US$(m)

%

8

1,070.3

15.0

1 Sinar Mas Group

Name

Issues

US$(m)

%

20,160,353.6

13.8

1 Standard Chartered

68

19,520,221.4

13.4

2 SMFG

9

932.3

13.0

2 Amantara Sec

1

169.1

9.2

46

13,602,848.4

9.3

3 MUFG

8

829.8

11.6

3 Morgan Stanley

2

120.3

6.5

4 Pt Cgs-Cimb Sekuritas

42

12,601,044.8

8.6

4 DBS

7

485.8

6.8

4 UOB

13

99.2

5.4

5 Trimegah Sec

40

11,640,072.3

8.0

5 Mizuho

5

426.2

6.0

5 Indo Premier Sec

3

95.9

5.2

6 BCA Sekuritas

46

11,559,910.6

7.9

6 UOB

5

407.3

5.7

6 Kresna Sekuritas

3

89.9

4.9

7 OCBC

4.6

6

563.7 30.6

7 Bank Negara Indonesia 42

11,341,265.1

7.8

6

315.5

4.4

1

85.1

8 DBS

33

7,764,010.2

5.3

8* BNP Paribas

2

277.4

3.9

8* Deutsche

1

74.8

4.1

9 Bahana Sec

22

6,139,693.2

4.2

8* Maybank

2

277.4

3.9

8* UBS

1

74.8

4.1

14

5,050,750.0

3.5

10 ANZ

5

263.3

3.7

8* Credit Suisse

74.8

4.1

20

7,153.3

10 Sinar Mas Group Total

194 146,253,154.2

*Market volume

Total

1 56

1,842.2

Based on market of syndication and market total

Proportional credit

Source: Refinitiv data

Total

7 Danareksa

Source: Refinitiv data

Proportional credit

SDC Code: AS9

natural resources company will hold investor meetings in Asia, Europe and the United States, starting on Monday. The proposed notes have expected ratings of B1/B+/B+, on par with the issuer. Meanwhile, Medco also announced consent solicitations on its US$400m 8.50% 2022s and US$500m 6.75% 2025s. It is seeking amendments to certain provisions of the indentures to align with the terms of the US$650m 7.375% 2026s it issued in last May, which will give it more financial flexibility. It will pay US$1.00 per US$1,000 in principal amount of the 2022s and US$2.00 per US$1,000 in principal amount of the 2025s as consent fee. January 24 is the deadline for the consent solicitation. Morgan Stanley and Standard Chartered are solicitation agents while Lucid Issuer Services is information and tabulation agent.

› TOWER BERSAMA HIRES FOR SENIOR BOND TOWER BERSAMA INFRASTRUCTURE,

rated BB/BB– (S&P/Fitch), has hired banks for investor meetings from January 7 on a proposed offering of five-year non-call three US dollar unrated senior unsecured notes. Barclays, BNP Paribas, Credit Agricole, DBS, HSBC and OCBC are joint global coordinators and bookrunners for the meetings in Singapore, Hong Kong and London on the Reg S deal. ANZ, CIMB, Mizuho Securities, MUFG, SMBC Nikko and UOB are joint lead managers and bookrunners.

SYNDICATED LOANS

Source: Refinitiv data

SDC Code: S11b

of a stake in Vale Indonesia after scrapping plans for a longer-tenor loan. MII, formerly known as Indonesia Asahan Aluminum (Inalum), is expected to mandate banks on the deal shortly. It is also mulling a bond takeout for the revolver. The company had sent out a request for proposals for the loan in early December with a deadline for responses later that month. That marked a change from an earlier plan under which MII had mandated Bank Mandiri, MUFG and Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp in November on a US$500m seven-year loan. That borrowing was also intended to fund the Indonesian mining holding company’s purchase of a stake in Vale Indonesia. MII agreed to acquire a 20% stake in nickel company Vale Indonesia for about US$500m to comply with the country’s regulations. Mining companies in Indonesia are required to reduce their foreign ownership to a maximum of 49% within 10 years of starting operations. Brazil’s Vale and Japan’s Sumitomo Metal Mining own 59% and 20%, respectively, in Vale Indonesia, which is currently valued at US$2.33bn. A conditional sales purchase agreement between MII and Vale was expected to be signed around mid-December, with completion targeted by June 2020. MII controls listed gold miner Antam, listed coal miner Bukit Asam, tin miner Timah and Freeport Indonesia.

State-owned MINING INDUSTRY INDONESIA is looking to raise US$500m from a 1.5-year revolving credit facility for its acquisition

› INDORENT INCREASES LOAN TO US$175M

has closed a US$300m three-year amortising facility after attracting 30 lenders in general syndication. ANZ, DBS Bank, Maybank, MUFG and United Overseas Bank were the mandated lead

Car rental company CSM CORPORATAMA, known as Indorent, has increased its fouryear term loan to US$175m from US$129m after attracting six banks in general syndication. Bank of China Hong Kong, CIMB Bank, CTBC Bank, DBS Bank, OCBC, Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp and Taishin International Bank were the mandated lead arrangers and bookrunners of the facility. SMBC was the coordinator. The transaction offered top-level all-in pricings of 200bp (onshore) or 180bp (offshore) based on interest margins of 175bp (onshore) or 155bp (offshore) over Libor, respectively, and has an average life of 2.8 years. Proceeds will be used for refinancing purposes, the purchase of vehicles in relation to business activities and working capital purposes. The borrower’s last visit to the loan market was in May 2018 for an increased US$156m four-year financing. ANZ, CIMB, CTBC, DBS, Standard Chartered and SMBC were the MLABs on the deal, which paid a top-level

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

45

› ADIRA DRAWS 30 BANKS INTO LOAN ADIRA DINAMIKA MULTI FINANCE

› STATE MINER OPTS FOR SHORTER TENOR

arrangers and bookrunners of the new transaction, which pays the same pricing as its previous loan from April. The new-money deal offered a top-level all-in pricing of 106bp based an interest margin of 90bp over Libor and has an average life of 1.625 years. Funds are for general corporate purposes. The borrower’s previous loan was an increased US$350m three-year financing, which attracted 20 lenders in general syndication. BNP Paribas, DBS, Maybank, MUFG and UOB were the MLABs of the loan, which offered a top-level all-in pricing of 106bp based on a margin of 90bp over Libor and an average life of 1.625 years. The borrower is a consumer finance unit of Bank Danamon Indonesia. For full allocations, see www.ifre.com.


all-in pricing of 211.43bp (onshore) and 191.43bp (offshore) based on interest margins of 190bp (onshore) and 170bp (offshore) over Libor and a 2.8-year average life. Indorent, an affiliate of Indomobil Finance Indonesia, provides vehicle and heavy-duty equipment financing services. Indorent and Indomobil Finance are units of Indomobil Multi Jasa, which is controlled by conglomerate Salim Group. For full allocations, see www.ifre.com.

Initial price thoughts on the deal were at mid-swaps plus 85bp area and then revised to 70bp area (+/-3bp). The Reg S senior unsecured notes have expected ratings of A1/A– (Moody’s/S&P). Mizuho, Barclays, HSBC, Natixis and Societe Generale were bookrunners.

SYNDICATED LOANS › TAZA WIND POWER PROJECT RAISES LOAN

last Thursday priced US$3bn of five and 10-year SEC-registered bonds at Treasuries plus 100bp and 125bp, respectively. Pricing came below initial price guidance shown for the US$1.5bn five-year and the US$1.5bn 10-year US dollar bonds at Treasuries plus 120bp area and Treasuries plus 145bp area, respectively. The five-year tranche priced at par for a yield of 2.648% and the 10-year notes priced at par for 3.103%. The notes, with expected ratings of Baa1/BBB+ (Moody’s/S&P), will settle on January 16. Proceeds will be used for loans to subsidiaries, including Nomura Securities. Nomura and Citigroup were joint bookrunners.

Japan Bank for International Cooperation and three commercial banks signed a €113m (US$125m) loan on December 20 for a 87.21MW Taza onshore wind power plant in Morocco, JBIC said in a statement. JBIC is funding €44m, while two Japanese banks MUFG and Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp are jointly providing €44m. Local bank Banque Marocaine du Commerce Exterieur is funding the remainder. Nippon Export and Investment Insurance have agreed to provide 100% political and 90% commercial risk coverage to the €44m 20-year loan provided by the two Japanese banks. PARC EOLIEN DE TAZA, established by Japan’s Mitsui & Co and France’s EDF Renouvelables, is the borrower and will use the funds to develop the plant located in Taza in the northern area of Morocco. Electricity will be sold to Morocco’s public electricity and water company Office National de l’Electricite et de l’Eau Potable for 20 years following the completion of construction. The deal marks JBIC’s first financing for a renewable energy project in Morocco.

› SMFG SELLS US$2.5BN DUAL-TRANCHE

› TOKAI CARBON RAISES HYBRID

has priced a US$2.5bn dual-tranche SEC-registered senior unsecured bond offering. A US$1.25bn 2.348% five-year tranche was priced at Treasuries plus 75bp and a US$1.25bn 2.75% 10-year tranche was priced at Treasuries plus 95bp. Initial thoughts for the two tranches were at the 95bp area and 115bp area wide of Treasuries, and then revised to 80bp area (+/5bp) and 100bp area (+/-5bp), respectively. The notes have expected ratings of A1/A– (Moody’s/S&P). Citigroup, SMBC, Goldman Sachs and Barclays were active bookrunners.

MIZUHO FINANCIAL GROUP has priced €750m (US$833m) 10.25-year euro-denominated bonds at par to yield 0.797%, or mid-swaps plus 67bp.

signed a ¥25bn (US$229m) 30-year subordinated loan on December 24 to partially take out the bridge loan it raised earlier this year to back its ¥100bn acquisition of its German peer Cobex, the Japanese carbon black manufacturer said in a statement on the same day. A total of 15 lenders joined mandated lead arranger MUFG in syndication. The loan, which can be repaid after five years, is rated BBB by Rating and Investment Information and is treated as 50% equity. In July the borrower completed the acquisition of the German developer, manufacturer and distributor of graphite and carbon products from private equity firm Triton Investments Advisers. On December 10, Tokai Carbon issued a ¥25bn 30-year subordinated bond to partially take out the bridge. The bond carries a coupon of 0.82% for the first five years.

46

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

JAPAN DEBT CAPITAL MARKETS › NOMURA PRICES DUAL-TRANCHER NOMURA HOLDINGS

SUMITOMO MITSUI FINANCIAL GROUP

› MIZUHO FG SELLS EURO BOND

TOKAI CARBON

› ITOCHU ADVANCE RAISING ¥12BN Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp is arranging a ¥12.113bn loan for ITOCHU ADVANCE LOGISTICS INVESTMENT to back its real estate acquisitions, the Tokyo-listed real estate investment trust said in a statement on January 6. The bullet term loan is split into four tranches: a ¥1.513bn one-year piece, a ¥2.65bn three-year portion, a ¥3.95bn fiveyear part and a ¥4bn eight-year piece with interest margins of 15bp over one-month Tibor, and 10bp, 24bp and 39bp over one or three-month Tibor, respectively. Signing is slated for January 30, while the funds will be partially drawn down on February 3. The remainder will be drawn down on March 31. Separately, the borrower is also raising a ¥1bn 10-year bullet term loan with a 0.7% fixed interest rate from Nippon Life Insurance as a bilateral. The REIT invests primarily in logistics facilities in Kanto and Kansai areas.

› JAPAN DISPLAY EXTENDS LINE JAPAN DISPLAY was set to extend the maturity of its ¥107bn one-year commitment line to March 31 from December 30, the Tokyo Stock Exchange-listed liquid-crystal display maker said in a statement on December 20. Signing was slated for December 25. Mizuho Bank and Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp are the mandated lead arrangers, while Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Bank came in as co-arranger. This follows an initial extension exercise from August, when the borrower extended the maturity of the facility for three months with the same lenders. The facility, which was originally signed in November 2018, carries a guarantee from the Innovation Network Corp of Japan, a state-backed fund and the borrower’s top shareholder. The borrower is expected to refinance the loan, which is used for working capital purposes, without INCJ’s guarantee and preferred shares next year. The LCD maker for smartphones has been suffering financially for the past five years. The company reported its 11th consecutive quarterly net loss last month on sluggish display sales and restructuring costs.

› FPG RENEWS ¥15BN COMMITMENT LINE signed a ¥15bn oneyear commitment line on December 23 to renew its existing facility of the same size, the Tokyo Stock Exchange-listed financial services firm said in a statement on the same day.

FINANCIAL PRODUCTS GROUP


COUNTRY REPORT MALAYSIA

Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp was the arranger, while Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Bank joined as co-arranger. Funds are for FPG’s tax leasing arrangement business. In December 2018, the borrower completed the ¥15bn one-year facility with the same two banks.

EQUITY CAPITAL MARKETS › AIR WATER EXERCISES OVERALLOTMENT TSE-listed AIR WATER has fully exercised the overallotment option on its recent follow-on offering, lifting the deal size to ¥49.2bn (US$449m). It sold 4.05m additional primary shares at ¥1,585, raising ¥6.4bn. The base deal consisted of 27m primary shares at the same price. The books were more than five times covered overall. The retail tranche was about five times covered and the institutional tranche more than 10 times covered. Air Water is a producer of industrial gases for industries ranging from chemicals and energy to healthcare, agriculture and logistics. SMBC Nikko was the sole lead manager and bookrunner.

› ITOCHU LOGISTICS SET FOR FOLLOW-ON is set to open books for a follow-on offering of units to raise up to ¥14bn, based on a minimum discount of 2.5% to January 6’s close of ¥118,900. The base size of 123,357 primary units is being marketed in an indicative discount range of 2.5%–5% to the market close on the pricing day. The issue price will be set after deducting ¥2,366 of expected dividend for the period ending January 31. There is an overallotment option of 5,500 primary units. International investors will take about 20% of the deal, domestic institutional investors 25% and retail buyers 55%. Proceeds will be partly used to acquire interests in two logistics assets respectively located in Inzai City and Kashiwa City in Japan at a combined cost of ¥25bn. The books opened on January 10 and the deal will price in between January 15–20. Daiwa and SMBC Nikko are the joint lead managers and bookrunners. ITOCHU ADVANCE LOGISTICS INVESTMENT

› JAPAN EXCELLENT IN FOLLOW-ON

January 6’s market close of ¥176,300. The commercial real estate trust is offering 43,000 units in the base deal in an indicative 2.5%–5% discount range to the market close on the pricing day. There is an overallotment option of 4,300 units. The total offering of units, including the overallotment, represents 3.6% of the total outstanding units. About 25% of the deal will be set aside for international investors while domestic institutions and retail buyers will take up 35% and 40% respectively. Proceeds will be used to acquire an interest in Grand Front Osaka, an urban complex comprising office buildings, commercial facilities and a hotel, for ¥8.8bn from Nippon Steel Kowa Real Estate. The book opened on January 10. The deal will price between January 15 and 20. Mizuho is the lead manager and sole bookrunner.

› MITSUI FUDOSAN PLANS FOLLOW-ON MITSUI FUDOSAN LOGISTICS PARK is planning a follow-on offering of units to raise up to ¥27.3bn, based on a minimum 2.5% discount to January 8’s market close of ¥481,000. The base size of 59,000 units is being marketed in an indicative discount range of 2.5%–5% to the market close on the pricing day. The issue price will be set after deducting ¥6,541 of expected dividend. There is an overallotment option of 3,000 units, or 5.1% of the base size. About 38% of the deal will be set aside for international investors, while domestic institutions and retail buyers will split the remainder 42%/58%. The Japanese REIT will use the proceeds to fund three acquisitions in conjunction with debt. Books will open on January 20–21. The

Top bookrunners of all Malaysian ringgit bonds 1/1/19 – 31/12/19

MALAYSIA DEBT CAPITAL MARKETS › CAGAMAS PRINTS LAST ISSUE OF 2019 National mortgage agency CAGAMAS has printed M$1.2bn (US$294.5m) of conventional and Islamic commercial and MTN notes. It priced M$600m six-month Islamic CP and M$200m conventional CP at par to yield 3.25% with respective spreads of 17bp over Islamic treasury bills and 20bp over conventional treasury bills. Cagamas also priced M$400m one-year Islamic MTNs at 3.29% with a spread of 26bp over Islamic government bonds. The notes settled on December 23 in Cagamas’s 26th issuance for the year, bringing its total 2019 bond sales to M$10.2bn.

› AEON READIES SUKUK SALE AEON CREDIT SERVICE MALAYSIA plans to kick off an offering of senior Islamic bonds in the week of January 20 to raise M$500m. CIMB and Hong Leong Investment Bank are joint lead managers for the deal, rated AA3 by RAM. The consumer finance company is expected to offer tenors of five and/or seven and/or eight years. The sukuk will be drawn from a M$2bn sukuk wakala programme.

Top bookrunners of Malaysia syndicated loans 1/1/19 – 31/12/19

Amount Name 1 CIMB Group

Issues

M$(m)

Amount %

Name

Deals

US$(m)

%

7

2,536.3

21.8

73

21,443.8 25.9

1 CIMB Group

2 Maybank

70

18,736.3

22.7

2 OCBC

5

1,888.6

16.3

3 RHB

46

11,861.7

14.3

3 Maybank

6

1,468.8

12.7

4 AMMB

39

11,316.2

13.7

4* UOB

1

1,126.4

9.7

5 K&N Kenanga

52

3,369.3

4.1

4* CCB

1

1,126.4

9.7

6 Affin

13

2,946.7

3.6

4* Bank of China

1

1,126.4

9.7

7 Bank Islam Malaysia

4

2,651.7

3.2

7 DBS

2

523.2

4.5

8 Public Bank

13

2,353.2

2.9

8 Standard Chartered

3

415.3

3.6

9 HSBC

17

2,252.9

2.7

9 MUFG

2

342.0

2.9

1,917.8

2.3

2

249.5

2.2

14

11,612.9

10 Hong Leong Financial Total

JAPAN EXCELLENT is planning a follow-on offering of units to raise up to ¥7.39bn, based on a minimum 2.5% discount to

deal will price in between January 22–28. Daiwa, Nomura and SMBC Nikko are the joint global coordinators.

11 240

82,711.4

*Market volume

Total

* Based on market of syndication and market total

Proportional credit

Source: Refinitiv data

10 BNP Paribas

Proportional credit

SDC Code: AS8

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

Source: Refinitiv data

SDC Code: S14b

47


Aeon Credit Service, ultimately owned by Japan’s Aeon, has a strong credit profile given its established position in the Malaysian consumer finance market, its strong profitability and manageable gearing level, said RAM. Its loan portfolio has grown at an annual average of 19% over the past five years, while its return on assets and return on equity are at a respective annualised 4% and 23.8% for the first half of the fiscal year ending February 2020, among the highest for domestic non-bank financial institutions. The issuer has senior bonds of just over M$1bn that will mature in 2020, of which M$600m matures in January, and about M$190m of subordinated perpetual bonds that will be callable next year.

PMSB, owned by Ahmad Zaki, holds the concession for a 300-bed teaching hospital at the International Islamic University of Malaysia. The facility was completed in 2016 and PMSB has been receiving concession receivables from the Malaysian government, as stipulated in the concession agreement. The concession receivables, which will be assigned to the sukukholders via the security agent, are projected to amount to M$1.768bn during the life of the sukuk. Maybank Investment Bank was lead manager for the deal.

› AZRB CAPITAL PRINTS SUKUK

Malaysian conglomerate HONG LEONG GROUP has raised a US$385m five-year loan to fund its portion of the consideration for the acquisition of Columbia Asia Hospitals’s assets in South-East Asia. Maybank and MUFG were the mandated lead arrangers and bookrunners of the club deal, while OCBC Bank and Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp joined as MLAs. Hong Leong Healthcare Group is the borrower. In September, Hong Leong Group and US private equity firm TPG Capital announced they had agreed to buy Columbia Asia’s 17 hospitals and one clinic in Malaysia, Indonesia and Vietnam for about US$1.2bn. TPG is said to be funding the deal via a combination of internally generated funds, equity and debt. The buyers will each own 50% of the acquired assets. The transaction was expected to close at the end of 2019. For full allocations, see www.ifre.com.

AZRB CAPITAL,

a funding vehicle of Malaysian engineering and construction company Ahmad Zaki Resources, printed M$535m of Islamic bonds on December 26. A M$100m three-year tranche will pay 4.7%, a M$85m five-year tranche will pay 4.85%, a M$95m seven-year tranche will pay 5.00%, a M$50m eight-year tranche will pay 5.05%, a M$50m nine-year tranche will pay 5.10%, a M$55m 10-year tranche will pay 5.15%, a M$55m 11-year tranche will pay 5.25% and a M$45m 12-year tranche will pay 5.35%. Proceeds from the bonds, rated AA– by Marc, will be used by the parent to subscribe to about M$344m of redeemable convertible preference shares that will be issued by Peninsular Medical (PMSB), with the balance to fund general working capital needs. PMSB will use the funds from the RCPS facility to repay debt.

SYNDICATED LOANS › HONG LEONG RAISES US$385M LOAN

EQUITY CAPITAL MARKETS Malaysia global equity and equity-related

› MR DIY TO FILE FOR US$500M IPO

1/1/19 – 31/12/19

MONGOLIA SYNDICATED LOANS › XACBANK OBTAINS SYNDICATED LOAN Mongolia’s XACBANK has agreed a US$100m five-year syndicated loan, strengthening the bank’s long-term funding base and allowing it to further expand into its focus areas of retail, micro and small and medium enterprises and green finance. Dutch development bank FMO arranged the financing and committed US$65m. The OPEC Fund for International Development committed US$25m, while the International Bank for Economic Cooperation committed US$10m. XacBank was established in 2001 and originally focused on providing microfinance loans in both rural and urban Mongolia. Over the past decade the bank has moved its focus to the MSME segment, retail lending and green finance. The funding contributes to the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals 8, 10 and 17, dealing with decent work and economic growth, reduced inequalities, and partnerships for goals, respectively. XacBank provides integrated banking and financial services to consumer and MSMEs through 80 branches. It has around 800,000 customers.

NEW ZEALAND DEBT CAPITAL MARKETS › BNZ TAPS SWISS MARKET BANK OF NEW ZEALAND (A1/AA–/AA–) priced a SFr300m (US$309m) 0.111% 8.5-year bond at

Amount Name

Issues

US$(m)

%

14

2,274.0

52.3

2 JP Morgan

3

406.6

9.3

3 RHB

11

292.8

6.7

4 Maybank

8

275.1

6.3

Source: Refinitiv data

Home improvement retailer MR DIY plans to file the draft prospectus for an IPO of up to US$500m some time this month and launch the deal in the first half, according to a person with knowledge of the transaction. Mr DIY, which is backed by private equity firm Creador, has more than 500 outlets in Malaysia and also runs stores in Thailand, Brunei and Indonesia. The company is likely to list its Malaysian assets in the Bursa Malaysia IPO. CIMB, Credit Suisse, JP Morgan, Maybank and RHB are the joint global coordinators and bookrunners with UBS.

48

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

1 CIMB Group

5 AMMB

13

172.3

4.0

6 M and A Sec

24

152.0

3.5

7

108.4

2.5

8 K&N Kenanga

11

80.4

1.9

9 UOB

16

77.6

1.8

7 Hong Leong Financial

10* BNP Paribas

1

66.7

1.5

10* Citigroup

1

66.7

1.5

Total

148

4,352.2

Top bookrunners of New Zealand syndicated loans 1/1/19 – 31/12/19 Amount Name 1 ANZ

Deals

US$(m)

%

22

4,476.4 45.2

2 NAB

7

1,804.4

3 CBA

6

1,502.7

15.2

4 Westpac

6

1,048.7

10.6

5 Citigroup

3

667.4

6.7

6 Credit Suisse

1

256.4

2.6

158.2

1.6

7 MUFG Total

1 40

18.2

9,914.2

* Based on market of syndication and market total Proportional credit

Source: Refinitiv data

SDC Code: S13b


COUNTRY REPORT PHILIPPINES

the tight end of mid-swaps plus 37bp–40bp guidance last Thursday for a zero new issue concession. UBS was sole lead manager for the transaction which attracted orders from 52 Swiss accounts. Asset managers bought 39% of the bond, banks and private banks 37%, insurance companies 12%, bank treasuries 10% and pension funds 3% to the nearest percentage point.

through a fully underwritten 1-for-4 entitlement offer. The acquisition will create a NZ$1bn global outdoor and action sports company. Rip Curl is a manufacturer of surfing equipment and apparel and has a presence in Australia, New Zealand, North America, Europe, South-East Asia and Brazil.

SYNDICATED LOANS

PHILIPPINES

› KATHMANDU WRAPS UP LOAN

DEBT CAPITAL MARKETS

Outdoor apparel and equipment retailer KATHMANDU HOLDINGS has closed syndication of a A$375m (US$258m) three-year loan backing the acquisition of Rip Curl Group to a strong response with a dozen banks joining. ANZ Bank, Bank of China, National Australia Bank and Westpac Banking Corp joined as mandated lead arrangers, while Bank of New Zealand and Commonwealth Bank of Australia joined as lead arrangers. First Commercial Bank, Hua Nan Commercial Bank, Mega International Commercial Bank, State Bank of India, Taishin International Bank and Taiwan Cooperative Bank participated as arrangers. The facility was oversubscribed and commitments were scaled back as a result. Credit Suisse was the sole MLA, underwriter and bookrunner of the senior secured borrowing, which comprises a A$220m loan and a A$155m multi-option facility with a pricing grid. The loan offered a top-level interest margin of 105bp over BBSY and a line fee of 90bp as well as a participation fee of 55bp. Kathmandu completed the acquisition of Rip Curl on October 31. Earlier that month, the company raised NZ$145m (US$92m)

Top bookrunners of all Philippine peso bonds 1/1/19 – 31/12/19

› SMC GLOBAL POWER MANDATES Philippines-based electric power distributor SMC GLOBAL POWER HOLDINGS mandated Credit Suisse, DBS, JP Morgan, Mizuho Securities, Standard Chartered Bank and UBS as joint lead managers as well as joint bookrunners to arrange investor meetings and conference calls in Hong Kong, Singapore, Zurich and London from January 7. A Reg S-only US dollar senior perpetual bond may follow subject to market conditions. The issuer, part of the San Miguel group, is unrated.

Issues

Ps(m)

1 Standard Chartered

7

88,487.5

2 HSBC

9

3 China Bk Capital Corp

Amount 20.9

1 Mizuho

66,829.9

15.8

13

45,679.2

10.8

4 ING

8

41,045.0

9.7

5 Philippine National

9

37,283.3

8.8

6 BDO Unibank

12

34,783.3

8.2

7 Deutsche

3

31,380.0

7.4

8 BPI

6

19,833.3

4.7

8* ICBC

7

18,950.0

4.5

4

10,783.3

2.5

Total

46

%

423,846.4

%

4

653.7

15.5

2 MUFG

4

570.4

13.6

3 Standard Chartered

5

539.3

12.8

1 UBS

4 DBS

3

430.6

10.2

2 Metropolitan B&T

5 ANZ

3

425.6

10.1

3 Deutsche

6 Bank of China

3

414.3

9.8

4 JP Morgan

7 SMFG

2

355.6

8.5

5 Morgan Stanley

1

222.2

5.3

6* Credit Suisse

8* First Abu Dhabi Bank

1

222.2

5.3

6* Citic

10 Citigroup

2

133.8

3.2

Total

8

4,210.0

* Based on market of syndication and market total

Proportional credit

Proportional credit

SDC Code: AS10

Philippines global equity and equity-related

US$(m)

*Market volume

Source: Refinitiv data

has received approval from Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas to issue up to Ps20bn (US$394m) unsecured Basel III-compliant Tier 2 bonds, according to a filing on the Philippine Stock Exchange. The central bank has also authorised UBP to redeem early its outstanding Ps7.2bn unsecured subordinated Tier 2 bonds due in 2025.

UNION BANK OF THE PHILIPPINES

Top bookrunners of Philippines syndicated loans 1/1/19 – 31/12/19 Deals

9 Metropolitan B&T

ABOITIZ EQUITY VENTURES has priced a US$400m 10-year non-call five senior unsecured bond offering at par to yield 4.20%, the tight end of final guidance of 4.25% area (+/-5bp) and inside initial guidance of 4.50% area. The unrated Reg S issue drew final orders of over US$1bn, including US$90m from the leads. Asia (ex-Philippines) took 55% of the bonds, the Philippines 33%, and EMEA 12%. Fund managers, asset managers and insurers took 57%, bank treasury 24%, private banks 18%, and corporates and others 1%. Wholly owned subsidiary AEV International is the issuer and Aboitiz Equity Ventures is the guarantor. Proceeds will be used to reimburse the funding AEV International received for the Gold Coin Group acquisition, and for proposed offshore investments and general corporate purposes. HSBC and Standard Chartered were joint global coordinators. They were also joint bookrunners with DBS Bank, Mizuho and MUFG. BDO Capital, BPI Capital and China Bank Capital were co-managers.

› UBP GETS NOD TO ISSUE TIER 2 BONDS Jollibee Worldwide, a subsidiary of the Philippines’ JOLLIBEE FOODS, has hired banks for a proposed offering of US dollar guaranteed senior perpetual capital securities, subject to market conditions. Citigroup and JP Morgan are joint global coordinators as well as joint lead managers and joint bookrunners with Credit Suisse and Mizuho Securities on the Reg S issue.

Name

10 Security Bank

› ABOITIZ SELLS LONG-DATED BONDS

› JOLLIBEE ADDS DOLLAR PERP TO MENU

Amount Name

The fast-food company will meet investors in Hong Kong, Singapore and London, starting on Monday.

Source: Refinitiv data

SDC Code: S15b

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

1/1/19 – 31/12/19 Amount Name

Issues

US$(m)

%

530.0

36.7

3

239.8

16.6

2

207.0

14.3

2

180.8

12.5

1

101.8

7.1

1

83.4

5.8 5.8

3

1

83.4

8 BDO Unibank

2

16.5

1.1

9 SVS Sec

1

0.3

0.0

Total

12

1,442.9

Source: Refinitiv data

49


SINGAPORE DEBT CAPITAL MARKETS › STARHILL REIT SETS UP PROGRAMME Singapore-listed STARHILL GLOBAL REIT has set up a S$2bn (US$1.48bn) multi-currency debt issuance programme. HSBC Institutional Trust Services Singapore, in its capacity as the REIT trustee, and Starhill Global REIT MTN will be the issuers under the programme. Bonds sold by the latter will be guaranteed by HSBC Institutional Trust Services. DBS is sole lead arranger and dealer. A SGX announcement did not mention any rating for the programme. S&P downgraded Starhill Global REIT to BBB from BBB+ in August on concerns that weaker operating performance and rent reversions would hit its cashflow adequacy ratios. Malaysia’s YTL Corporation is the sponsor of the REIT.

FCOT is due to merge with Frasers Logistics & Industrial Asset Management to create an enlarged, yet-unnamed real estate investment trust. Under the consent solicitation launched in mid-December, bondholders were asked to waive any event of default and approve certain amendments, including a new covenant for the guarantor to comply with the aggregate leverage limit. In the FRNs due 2022, FCOT is seeking to discontinue the use of the Singapore dollar swap offer rate (SOR) benchmark and to introduce the Singapore overnight rate average (SORA) to comply with a regulatory transition to an industry-wide use of SORA. Bondholders who submitted consent by an early deadline of December 31 will receive 0.25% in principal amount in series 001, 0.03% in series 002, 0.25% in series 004 and 0.30% in series 005. Those who approved after that date will receive, respectively, 0.15%, 0.02%, 0.15% and 0.20%. OCBC was sole solicitation agent.

› WING TAI GOES LONG-DATED last Thursday sold a S$100m 10-year non-call five bond at par to yield 3.68% with a spread of 197.2bp over Singapore dollar SOR. The pricing came inside initial guidance of 4% area. The unrated transaction drew healthy demand, with S$460m of orders from 40 accounts. Asset managers, insurance companies and hedge funds took up 72% of the deal, with banks and corporate investors allocated 6% and private banks taking the remaining 22%. Singapore accounted for 99% of the deal. The Singapore property developer can redeem the bonds on the interest payment date on January 16 2025 and every interest due date thereafter at a designated call

WING TAI HOLDINGS

› FCOT INVESTORS GIVE CONSENT Investors holding S$340m of FRASERS bonds have agreed to waive any potential event of default that may arise from an impending merger. Bondholders also gave consent to certain amendments of covenants in four series of bonds. The bonds involved are a S$100m 2.835% note due 2021 in series 001, a S$100m 2.625% note due 2020 in series 002, a S$80m floating-rate note due 2022 in series 004 and a S$60m 3.185% note due 2023 in series 005. All the bonds were issued off a S$1bn MTN programme that is guaranteed by British and Malayan Trustees in its capacity as FCOT trustee.

COMMERCIAL TRUST

Top bookrunners of all Singapore dollar bonds 1/1/19 – 31/12/19

1 DBS

Issues

S$(m)

43

7,395.6

› ALLGREEN HOUSES SENIORS ALLGREEN PROPERTIES last Thursday sold S$250m of five-year senior bonds priced at par to yield 3.15% with a spread of 166bp over Singapore dollar SOR. More than S$350m of orders were received from over 32 accounts. Fund managers bought 31% while private banks took 10% and banks, corporate investors and others took the remaining 59%. Singapore accounted for the entire deal. The unrated notes will be issued by Allgreen Treasuries and guaranteed by Allgreen Properties. Settlement is on January 16 and will be off a S$2bn debt issuance programme. Proceeds will be used to refinance borrowings and to fund general corporate needs including financing of potential acquisitions and business expansion plans. DBS was sole bookrunner.

SYNDICATED LOANS › ORIENTAL ENERGY UNIT RAISES CLUB The Singaporean subsidiary of Chinese gas and chemicals company Oriental Energy has raised a US$100m 364-day facility for working capital purposes. BNP Paribas Singapore branch, ICBC Bank,

Top bookrunners of all Singapore dollar bonds

Top bookrunners of all Singapore dollar

(non-domestic) 1/1/19 – 31/12/19

bonds (domestic) 1/1/19 – 31/12/19

Amount Name

price ranging from 101.84 in 2025 to 100.460 in 2029. Settlement is on January 16. Proceeds from the unrated unsecured and subordinated notes will be used to meet working capital and investment needs as well as to refinance debt. Private banks will receive a 25-cent concession. OCBC was sole lead manager and bookrunner.

Amount % 31.0

Issues

S$(m)

1 Standard Chartered

9

937.5

Amount %

Name

Issues

S$(m)

%

18.9

1 DBS

35

6,499.7 34.4

2 OCBC

31

2 DBS

8

895.8

18.1

2 OCBC

27

5,375.2 28.5

3 UOB

24

4,059.5

17.0

3 UOB

6

722.9

14.6

3 UOB

18

3,336.7

4 Standard Chartered

19

2,135.8

9.0

4 HSBC

6

454.0

9.2

4 Standard Chartered

10

1,198.3

6.4

5 HSBC

12

1,394.0

5.9

5 OCBC

4

445.8

9.0

5 HSBC

6

940.0

5.0

6 Maybank

6

748.3

3.1

6 Credit Suisse

4

377.3

7.6

6 Maybank

6

748.3

4.0

7 Credit Suisse

7

644.8

2.7

7 UBS

3

337.5

6.8

7 Credit Suisse

3

267.5

1.4

8 UBS

4

487.5

2.1

8 Societe Generale

2

312.5

6.3

8* ANZ

1

150.0

0.8

9 Societe Generale

2

312.5

1.3

9 Credit Agricole

1

108.3

2.2

8* UBS

1

150.0

0.8

1

150.0

0.6

1

62.5

1.3

10 Haitong Sec

1

50.0

0.3

18

4,954.1

10 ANZ Total

75

5,821.1 24.4

Name

23,829.8

10 BNP Paribas Total

*Market volume

*Market volume

Proportional credit

Proportional credit

Source: Refinitiv data

50

SDC Code: AS12

Source: Refinitiv data

Total

57

17.7

18,875.7

*Market volume Proportional credit

SDC Code: AS14

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

Source: Refinitiv data

SDC Code: AS15


COUNTRY REPORT SINGAPORE

Aqua Munda launches Hyflux tender Restructuring Offer to buy senior unsecured debt at a minimum discount of 85% Aqua Munda, a little known company that stunned the market by putting itself at the centre of the HYFLUX restructuring saga, has launched an offer to buy the Singapore company’s unsecured debt comprising senior bonds, contingent liabilities, trade and other debt at a minimum discount of 85%. The company launched the offer on December 30 and it will expire on January 23, an extension from the previously indicated January 10. Under the tender, it will select bids via a reverse Dutch auction, essentially picking bids with the highest discounts first, then working its way to the next highest offered discount until all available settlement funds have been used up. The total settlement amount to be set aside by Aqua Munda to buy the debt has not been released yet. The combined senior unsecured debt is estimated at S$1.8bn (US$1.33bn) by Aqua Munda, a newly set up Singaporean company with business activities in water and waste

ING Bank and Rabobank were the lenders of the financing, with the former two providing US$30m each and the latter two committing US$20m each. BNP Paribas is the agent and was the coordinator of the club facility, which is said to pay an all-in pricing in the mid-200s.

treatment and oilfield chemicals. The company’s announcement last month that it planned to buy Hyflux’s senior unsecured debt potentially scuttled a S$400m rescue investment package from United Arab Emirates-based Utico. Aqua Munda is betting that senior creditors are tired of the prolonged restructuring of the Singapore water treatment services provider, which owes a total of S$2.8bn, including S$900m in perpetual bonds and preference shares. The junior bondholders are not included in this tender. The tender covers S$100m of 4.25% bonds due 2018, S$65m 4.6% bonds due 2019 and S$100m 4.2% bonds due 2019, as well as senior unsecured debt, contingent debt and/or trade and other debt owed by Hyflux and subsidiaries Hydrochem, Hyflux Membrance Manufacturing and/or Hyflux Engineering. Aqua Munda said it would hold sole and absolute discretion to decide which

subsidiary Ningbo Fortune Petrochemical from a group of lenders led by Bank of Communications in July 2014. Founded in 1996, Oriental Energy principally distributes liquefied petroleum gas and chemicals.

› AVATION-BRA TAKE AIRCRAFT DELIVERY

ORIENTAL ENERGY (SINGAPORE) INTERNATIONAL

is the borrower, while Oriental Petroleum (Yangtze) and Oriental Energy are the guarantors. The Shenzhen-listed parent last raised a Rmb2.35bn (US$379m) facility for its TRADING

ATR has delivered the world’s first greenfinanced aircraft to Sweden’s Braathens Regional Airlines, according to a press release from the France-based aircraft manufacturer on December 19.

Top bookrunners of Singapore syndicated loans 1/1/19 – 31/12/19

Singapore global equity and equity-related

Amount Name

1/1/19 – 31/12/19

Deals

US$(m)

%

1 UOB

13

3,631.2

14.4

2 DBS

19

2,450.3

9.7

Amount Name

Issues

US$(m)

%

1 DBS

17

2,129.8

22.1

2 Goldman Sachs

2

1,926.3 20.0

3 Citigroup

7

852.6

3 Maybank

13

2,018.6

8.0

4 SMFG

10

1,794.2

7.1

5 OCBC

11

1,644.8

6.5

4 Morgan Stanley

1

776.3

8.1

6 Standard Chartered

8

1,536.1

6.1

5 JP Morgan

3

661.5

6.9

8.8

7 Mizuho

7

1,038.4

4.1

6 Credit Suisse

8

622.2

6.5

8 MUFG

7

1,019.4

4.0

7 UBS

5

572.0

5.9

9 HSBC

10

970.1

3.8

8 OCBC

4

265.2

2.8

8

930.4

3.7

9 BNP Paribas

3

259.0

2.7

48

25,287.6

3

229.6

2.4

10 Bank of China Total

10 HSBC Total

* Based on market of syndication and market total

49

9,641.6

Proportional credit

Source: Refinitiv data

SDC Code: S16b

Source: Refinitiv data

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

bids to accept and the tender is subject to Hyflux chair Olivia Lum entering into and not breaching a service agreement and a non-compete agreement, among other conditions. Corporate advisory firm Duff & Phelps is working with Aqua Munda on the transaction. The potential investor is expected to engage holders of Hyflux’s S$900m perpetual bonds and preference shares once its offer to acquire the senior unsecured debt is completed. “We would like to assure P&P holders and shareholders as well as other stakeholders that we are aware of the tight timelines and the pressure on Hyflux to undertake and complete its debt restructuring exercise,” said Aqua Munda in a statement. “Our objective in undertaking the invitation (and if successful) is to facilitate on an expedited basis a debt restructuring exercise that is fair and equitable for all stakeholders.” KIT YIN BOEY

Deutsche Bank provided a 10-year bilateral green loan of around €20m (US$22m) to fund the purchase of the aircraft for Singapore-headquartered AVATION, which has leased it to BRA. “We’re hopeful that this leads the way for more sustainable financing activity in aviation, and increased adoption of lower carbon emission aircraft across the industry, to help make flying more eco-responsible,” said Richard Finlayson, Deutsche Bank’s head of global transportation finance, Asia. Vigeo Eiris, an independent agency providing Environmental, Social and Governance ratings, said that the project of replacing ageing regional jets with new ATR 72-600 aircraft is aligned with the Green Loan Principles established by the Loan Market Association in 2018, according to the release. The aircraft delivered to BRA forms one of three ATR 72-600 planes that form the security for the loan. It is also part of a new order for five 72600s for Avation, all purchased from ATR and leased to BRA. Upon completion of the order in early 2020, BRA will itself operate an entirely ATR fleet, comprised of 15 ATR 72-600 aircraft, which emit 40% less carbon dioxide than other jets and turbopops. For shorter

51


distances, they also accelerate air using less power and therefore burn less fuel. “We have made a commitment to decrease our environmental impact and the ATR is an essential part of our strategy,” said BRA CEO Geir Stormorken. “By replacing parts of our existing fleet of regional jets with ATR 72-600 aircraft we will emit 7,500 fewer tonnes of CO2 per aircraft, per year.”

(US$850m–$1bn) from the IPO, while local media have reported that the deal could value the company at W4trn–W6trn. The company has mandated Citigroup, Morgan Stanley, Korea Investment & Securities and NH Investment & Securities. SK Biopharma, which was founded in 2011, last year received regulatory approval from the US Food and Drug Administration for two of its drugs, Sunosi and Xcopri. The former is a treatment for sleep disorders and the latter is an anti-epileptic drug.

› ESR HIRES BANKS FOR K-REIT IPO

SOUTH KOREA DEBT CAPITAL MARKETS › KEXIM MAKES EURO PRIVATE PLACEMENT (Kexim), rated Aa2/AA/AA–, has sold €150m (US$168m) of five-year notes in a private placement. The Reg S bond priced on December 16 with a fixed coupon of 0.137% to yield the equivalent of three-month Euribor plus 41bp. The issue, drawn off the quasi-sovereign’s global medium-term note programme, was its only euro currency private placement in 2019, according to a Kexim funding official. The notes are listed in Singapore. UBS was lead manager and bookrunner. EXPORT-IMPORT BANK OF KOREA

EQUITY CAPITAL MARKETS

Logistics property developer ESR CAYMAN has mandated Citigroup and Morgan Stanley to work on a proposed real estate investment trust IPO of at least US$500m in South Korea, according to people close to the matter. Local bank Korea Investment & Securities is also part of the syndicate, said one of the people. Warburg Pincus-backed ESR raised HK$14bn (US$1.8bn) from a Hong Kong IPO in October in its second listing attempt, after pulling its first try in June. The proposed K-REIT IPO comes after Lotte REIT completed a successful KRX listing in October. The IPO raised W430bn, making Lotte REIT the largest listed REIT in the country. According to ESR Cayman’s Hong Kong IPO prospectus, it has 25 properties in South Korea valued at US$3.6bn.

› SK BIOPHARMA WINS KRX APPROVAL SK BIOPHARMACEUTICALS,

the drug-making unit of conglomerate SK Group, has received approval from Korea Exchange to list next year, a person close to the transaction said. IFR previously reported that SK Biopharma is looking to raise W1.0trn–W1.2trn

Top bookrunners of all South Korea Won bonds 1/1/19 – 31/12/19 Amount Name

Issues

Won(m)

%

1 KB Financial

617

29,684,935.3 15.6

2 NH Inv & Sec

385

25,550,000.0 13.4

SRI LANKA SYNDICATED LOANS › BANK OF CEYLON RETURNS State-owned BANK OF CEYLON has raised US$130m from a one-year loan with four banks participating, marking its return to the offshore loan markets after less than two years. Mashreqbank was the mandated lead arranger and bookrunner of the financing,

3 Korea Investment

541

21,265,172.0 11.2

4 Kyobo Life

384

17,051,521.3 8.9

5 Mirae Asset Daewoo

285

13,604,592.0 7.1

6 Kiwoom Sec

247

12,978,530.0 6.8

7 DB Financial Invest

192

11,299,182.1 5.9

8 SK Sec

130

9,214,000.0 4.8

9 Hana Financial

240

8,722,302.6 4.6

1 KDB

3

56

5,749,415.0 3.0

2 Mizuho

2

Total

5

10 Hanwha Inv & Sec Total

4,956 190,725,570.6

*Market volume

52

Name

Deals

TAIWAN SYNDICATED LOANS › NANKANG RUBBER CLOSES LOAN Units of Taiwan-listed NANKANG RUBBER TIRE have raised a NT$30bn (US$980m) fiveyear loan for land development purposes. Hua Nan Commercial Bank was the mandated lead arranger and bookrunner of the transaction, while Bank of Taiwan was the bookrunner. The deal comprises a NT$8bn tranche A, a NT$10bn tranche B and a NT$12bn tranche C. The interest margin ranges from 88bp to 127bp over Taibor. Lenders were offered a top-level upfront fee of 8bp. Nanzong Construction Developments, Yuanruei Development and Zhikai Development were the borrowers of the transaction. Nankang Rubber was established in 1959 in Taiwan and manufactures automobile tyres and other synthetic rubber products. For full allocations, see www.ifre.com.

CORP

South Korea global equity and equity-related 1/1/19 – 31/12/19 Amount Name

Issues

US$(m)

%

1 NH Inv & Sec

21

998.0

12.5

2 Korea Investment

11.4

29

903.4

3 Goldman Sachs

3

734.4

9.2

4 KB Financial

16

543.0

6.8

5 Bank of America

3

519.8

6.5

6 Shinhan Financial

18

415.3

5.2

7 Morgan Stanley

1

343.9

4.3

1,918.7 70.6

8 UBS

1

327.8

4.1

800.0 29.4

9 Mirae Asset Daewoo

15

320.6

4.0

296.2

3.7

Amount US$(m)

%

2,718.7

10 JP Morgan Total

* Based on market of syndication and market total

Proportional credit

Source: Refinitiv data

Top bookrunners of South Korea syndicated loans 1/1/19 – 31/12/19

while Commercial Bank of Dubai, Commercial Bank PSQC and National Bank of Ras AlKhaimah joined as participants. The banks committed US$60m, US$25m, US$25m and US$20m, respectively. Proceeds raised are for general corporate purposes. The borrower’s last visit to the loan markets was in July 2018 for a US$150m one-year loan that paid a top-level all-in pricing of 130bp based on an interest margin of 85bp over Libor. HSBC and Standard Chartered were the MLABs of the deal, which attracted four others. Bank of Ceylon is rated B1/B (Moody’s/ Fitch).

1 134

7,958.2

Proportional credit

SDC Code: AS22

Source: Refinitiv data

SDC Code: S17b

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

Source: Refinitiv data

SDC Code: C1Q


COUNTRY REPORT THAILAND

› FINA FINANCE RETURNS FOR LOAN is returning to the loan market for a NT$5bn three-year deal within eight months of obtaining a smaller facility. Taiwan Cooperative Bank is the mandated lead arranger and bookrunner of the transaction, which comprises a NT$5bn tranche A and a NT$3bn guarantee tranche B. The two tranches cannot exceed a combined amount of NT$5bn. Tranche A offers an interest margin of 75bp over Taibor, with a pre-tax interest rate floor set at 1.7%, while tranche B offers an annual guarantee fee of 65bp. Banks are being invited to join as managers with commitments of NT$600m or more for an upfront fee of 8bp, or as participants with NT$300m–$599m for a 4bp fee. Commitments are due by January 10. Funds are for working capital purposes. Fina’s previous visit to the loan market was in May 2019 for a NT$4.3bn three-year borrowing. Land Bank of Taiwan was the MLAB on that transaction, which comprises a NT$2.87bn tranche A and a NT$1.43bn guarantee tranche B. Tranche A offers an interest margin of 75bp over Taibor, with a pre-tax interest rate floor set at 1.7%, while tranche B offers an annual guarantee fee of 65bp. Fina Finance, a subsidiary of Chailease Finance, provides financing services to small and medium-sized companies in the construction and transportation sectors.

FINA FINANCE & TRADING

cannot exceed a combined NT$4bn. Tranche A offers an interest margin of 50bp over Taibor, with a pre-tax interest rate floor set at 1.7%, while tranche B offers an annual guarantee fee of 50bp. Banks are being invited to join as MLAs with commitments of NT$800m or more for an upfront fee of 8bp, as co-arrangers with NT$600m–$799m for a 5bp fee, or as managers with NT$400m–$599m for a 3bp fee. The deadline for responses is January 17. Funds are for working capital purposes and to refinance a NT$3bn five-year facility signed in December 2015. Bank of Taiwan, FCB and Land Bank of Taiwan were the MLABs on that deal, which offered a margin of 60bp over Taibor, with a pre-tax interest rate floor of 1.7%, according to LPC data. The borrower last tapped the loan market in September for a NT$2.6bn three-year senior facility with Credit Agricole as the MLAB, according to LPC data.

› GLORIA MATERIAL RAISES NT$6.2BN REFI

has launched a NT$4bn fiveyear refinancing, barely four months after obtaining a smaller facility. First Commercial Bank is the mandated lead arranger and bookrunner of the latest transaction, which comprises a NT$4bn revolving credit tranche A and a NT$3.2bn guarantee tranche B. The two tranches

Steel producer GLORIA MATERIAL TECHNOLOGY CORP has raised a NT$6.2bn five-year refinancing. First Commercial Bank was the mandated lead arranger and bookrunner of the transaction, which comprises a NT$1.16bn tranche A, a NT$3.06bn tranche B and a NT$720m tranche C, a NT$720m guarantee facility tranche D and a NT$540m tranche E. Tranches A, B, C and E offer interest margins of 35bp over the one-year post office savings rate, with a pre-tax interest rate floor set at 1.7%. Tranche D offers an annual guarantee fee of 58bp. Banks were offered a top-level upfront fee of 15bp. Funds are for refinancing and working capital purposes. The borrower last tapped the market in October 2018 for a NT$4.5bn-equivalent fiveyear refinancing. Chang Hwa Commercial Bank was the MLAB of that transaction,

Top bookrunners of all Taiwan dollar bonds 1/1/19 – 31/12/19

Top bookrunners of Taiwan syndicated loans 1/1/19 – 31/12/19

› CHENG LOONG BACK FOR NT$4BN REFI CHENG LOONG

Amount Name

Issues

NT$(m)

Name

THAILAND DEBT CAPITAL MARKETS › PTTEP MAKES TIGHT RETURN Thailand’s leading oil and gas producer PTT rated Baa1/BBB+/ BBB+, last Thursday returned to the US dollar market after less than two months with a US$350m 10-year 144A/Reg S bond. The notes, rated Baa1/BBB+ (Moody’s/Fitch), priced at 110bp over Treasuries, at the low end of final price guidance of 115bp area (+/5bp). Final guidance was tightened sharply from initial guidance of 155bp. Orders hit US$4.3bn before steep attrition kicked in at the revised number. Final orders came to more than US$1.5bn from 88 accounts. The still healthy reception reflected continuing appetite for the Thai credit, which in late November raised US$650m in 40year 144A/Reg S bonds priced at par to yield 3.903%. The new 10-year bonds priced at par to yield 2.993%. Geographically, the notes were well distributed with Asia taking 62%, EMEA 18% and the US 20%. Asset and fund managers bought 68%, banks 12%, insurance companies 13% and corporate investors, private banks and others 7%. Settlement is on January 15. PTTEP Treasury Center Company is the issuer and EXPLORATION AND PRODUCTION,

Taiwan global equity and equity-related

Amount %

which comprised a NT$2.4bn term loan tranche A, a NT$1.6bn revolving credit tranche B and a NT$500m guarantee facility tranche C. Tranches A and B offer margins of 36bp over Taibor, with a pre-tax interest rate floor set at 1.7%. Tranche C offers an annual guarantee fee of 65bp. For full allocations, see www.ifre.com.

1/1/19 – 31/12/19

Deals

US$(m)

%

Amount Name

1 Yuanta Financial

33

111,068.3 29.3

1 Taiwan Financial

47

4,613.9

14.9

2 Masterlink Sec

20

62,250.0

16.4

2 Mega Financial

32

3,683.8

11.9

1 Yuanta Financial

3 CTBC Financial

Issues

US$(m)

%

17

544.0

32.7 28.7

3 Capital Sec

9

45,500.0

12.0

27

3,038.9

9.8

2 Taishin Financial

17

478.3

4 Hua Nan Financial

3

29,520.0

7.8

4 Taiwan Cooperative Finl Hldg 34

2,619.7

8.4

3 KGI Financial

17

131.1

7.9

5 KGI Financial

12

23,883.3

6.3

5 Land Bank of Taiwan

27

2,094.9

6.7

4 Sinopac Holdings

10

81.5

4.9

6 Taishin Financial

6

20,225.0

5.3

6 First Financial

28

1,976.0

6.4

5 Grand Fortune Sec

7

81.1

4.9

7 HSBC

3

18,550.0

4.9

7 Taishin Financial

21

1,815.0

5.8

6 CTBC Financial

5

78.0

4.7

8 Taiwan Cooperative Finl Hldg 17

15,700.0

4.1

8 Fubon Financial

27

1,811.7

5.8

7 Masterlink Sec

9

54.6

3.3

9 Mega Financial

7

12,250.0

3.2

9 Standard Chartered

4

1,082.4

3.5

8 HSBC

1

50.0

3.0

4

12,100.0

3.2

789.1

2.5

1

43.7

2.6

5

19.0

1.1

10 Fubon Financial Total

101 379,680.0

*Market volume

Total

16 190

31,069.3

9 Hua Nan Sec 10 Mega Financial Total

* Based on market of syndication and market total

Proportional credit

Source: Refinitiv data

10 Hua Nan Financial

117

1,666.5

Proportional credit

SDC Code: AS11

Source: Refinitiv data

SDC Code: S19b

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

Source: Refinitiv data

53


PTTEP is the guarantor. Proceeds will be used for general corporate purposes. Bank of America, Citigroup, HSBC and Societe Generale were joint lead managers and bookrunners.

› THAIFOODS LEANS ON CGIF

› UNIQUE ENGINEERS PHASE ONE will offer three-year bonds in a public offering to retail and institutional investors next month to raise Bt3bn (US$99.3m). The unsecured notes, rated BBB by Tris, will pay 3.7%. Subscription will be held February 3-5. This is the first of two offerings expected this year from the Thai engineering and residential property company to raise a total of Bt6bn to repay debt and fund working capital needs. The second bond sale is expected in the third quarter of the year. Krungthai Bank is sole lead manager and underwriter. The bonds are rated a notch below Unique’s corporate rating of BBB+ to reflect Tris’ concerns that the company’s total debt is rising faster than expected because of an increase in working capital. Tris said the company’s debt to capitalization ratio rose to 58.1% at end-September, from 40%–50% over the past three years. The bonds will include a key financial covenant under which Unique will have to keep its net debt to equity ratio below 3.5 times. The company’s current ratio is around 1.4 times.

UNIQUE ENGINEERING AND CONSTRUCTION

› TPI POLENE OPENS SUBSCRIPTION TPI POLENE will open a three-day subscription from January 13 to offer up to B6bn of threeyear bonds to the public and institutional investors. The bonds, rated BBB+ by Tris, was priced last month at par to yield 3.5%. CIMB Thai is sole lead manager for the deal.

Top bookrunners of all Thai baht bonds 1/1/19 – 31/12/19 Amount Name 1 Kasikornbank

Issues 84

Bt(m)

%

196,300.4 20.3

2 Bangkok Bank

59

163,531.4

16.9

3 Krung Thai

48

119,895.3

12.4

4 CIMB Group

33

94,663.5

9.8

5 Siam Commercial

35

90,961.9

9.4

6 MUFG

16

62,530.7

6.5

7 Thanachart Capital

16

55,440.0

5.7

8 UOB

27

46,360.0

4.8

9 Phatra Sec

23

40,256.6

4.2

27

15,621.2

1.6

10 Asia Plus Sec Total

224 965,360.5

*Market volume Proportional credit

Source: Refinitiv data

54

Proceeds will be used to refinance a Bt3bn 5.2% bond that will mature in January as well as to purchase equipment for production expansion and to meet working capital needs.

SDC Code: AS7

THAIFOODS GROUP, rated BBB– by Tris, has priced a five-year guaranteed bond at 2.48% for up to Bt2bn. Institutional investors were invited to subscribe to the notes, guaranteed by Credit Guarantee and Investment Facility, on January 6-7. The notes will be rated AAA by Tris to reflect the guarantee from CGIF, a unit of Asian Development Bank. The Thai integrated food processor will use the proceeds to repay an intercompany loan to Thai Foods Feed Mills as well as to refinance a working capital loan and meet working capital needs. Thaifoods, which raises and processes poultry and pigs and produces animal feed, has an outstanding Bt1.15bn 4.9% three-year note maturing next July. United Overseas Bank Thai was sole lead manager.

of up to Bt1.8bn will pay 2.36%, a seven-year tranche of up to Bt500m pays 2.85% and a 10year tranche of up to Bt1.2bn pays 3.2%. Subscription, which launched last Thursday, will close on Monday. The bonds, rated A– by Tris, will be drawn from a Bt50bn MTN programme. Frasers Property, which owns and manages industrial and logistics warehouses in industrial estates in Thailand, added the 3.5year tranche and lifted its targeted issue size from Bt3bn following encouraging feedback from investors. Bangkok Bank and UOB Thailand are joint lead managers for the deal.

› EXIM THAI GOES TRIPLE settled three, seven and 10-year bonds on December 26 to raise a combined Bt5bn. The Bt1bn three-year tranche was priced at par to yield 1.74%, the Bt2bn seven-year tranche will pay 2.06% and the Bt2bn 10-year tranche will pay 2.31%. CIMB Thai and Kasikorbank were joint lead managers for the deal.

EXPORT-IMPORT BANK OF THAILAND

› SRT ON TRACK WITH DUAL-TRANCHER

› SIAMGAS TAKES TO THE PUBLIC

STATE RAILWAY OF THAILAND has raised Bt11.4bn from the sale of seven and 9.5-year bonds. The Bt4bn seven-year tranche pays 1.58% while the Bt7.4bn 9.5-year tranche pays 1.75%. The notes, sold on a standalone basis, were settled on December 24. CIMB Thai and Krungthai Bank were joint lead managers and underwriters for the unrated deal. The government-owned railway company has about Bt5bn of bonds that will mature in the first half of 2020. This was its fourth issuance for 2019, raising a total of Bt19.5bn.

SIAMGAS AND PETROCHEMICALS

› MBK DEALS A BOND Property company MBK, rated A by Tris, has sold Bt3bn nine-year unsecured bonds at par to yield 2.94%. The bonds were offered to institutional investors. Proceeds will be used to meet working capital, business expansion and refinancing needs. A filing with Thailand’s Securities and Exchange Commission indicated that MBK acted as debt dealer for the bond.

› FRASERS PROPERTY OFFERS FIVERS is offering five tranches of bonds to institutional and highnet-worth investors to raise up to Bt5bn. A three-year tranche of up to Bt500m is priced at par to yield 2%, a 3.5-year tranche of up to Bt1bn will pay 2.1%, a five-year tranche

FRASERS PROPERTY THAILAND

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

has priced four-year bonds at par to yield 3.85%. A public offering will be held on January 20-22 during which institutional and retail investors can subscribe to the notes, rated BBB+ by Tris. The Thai liquefied petroleum gas distributor is looking to raise up to Bt4bn and will use the proceeds for refinancing and acquisition purposes. The pricing came at the low end of a price guidance range of 3.80%–4.00%. Asia Plus Securities, CIMB Thai Bank and Krungthai Bank are joint lead managers on the sale to institutional and retail investors, while UOB Thai will be joint lead manager on the institutional portion only. Part of the proceeds will be used to refinance Bt2bn of bonds maturing in January, and the balance will fund the acquisition of a majority stake in Thai Public Port.

SYNDICATED LOANS › CAL-COMP ELECTRONICS COMPLETES A&E CAL-COMP ELECTRONICS (THAILAND) and its specialpurposes vehicle LOGISTAR INTERNATIONAL HOLDING have completed an amendment and extension of an existing US$216m from 2017. The three-year loan, originally signed in October 2017 with 14 lenders, has been


COUNTRY REPORT VIETNAM

Top bookrunners of Thailand syndicated loans 1/1/19 – 31/12/19 Amount Name

Thailand global equity and equity-related 1/1/19 – 31/12/19 Amount

Deals

US$(m)

%

1

3,048.1

70.7

2* Mizuho

1

400.0

2* Kasikornbank

1

400.0

4 SMFG

1

5 Taiwan Financial

1 4

4,313.7

1 Siam Commercial

Total

Issues

US$(m)

%

1 Trinity Securities Group

1

1,017.7

21.6

9.3

2 Credit Suisse

4

831.3

17.7

9.3

3 Morgan Stanley

2

477.3

10.2

395.9

9.2

4 Bualuang Sec

3

322.5

6.9

69.8

1.6

5 Siam Commercial

3

303.9

6.5

6 Kasikornbank

3

295.2

6.3

7 Phatra Sec

2

289.0

6.1

1

224.1

4.8

* Based on market of syndication and market total

8* UBS

Proportional credit

Source: Refinitiv data

Name

SDC Code: S18b

extended for another three years. Bank Sinopac, E.Sun Commercial Bank, Land Bank of Taiwan, Mega International Commercial Bank, Taipei Fubon Commercial Bank, Taishin International Bank and Taiwan Cooperative Bank were the mandated lead arrangers and bookrunners of the loan, which had closed that year with seven other lenders participating in general syndication. E.Sun is the facility agent. All lenders, except Ta Chong Bank, rejoined the A&E exercise for the deal, which comprises a US$108m term loan tranche A and a US$108m revolving credit tranche B. Banks agreeing to the A&E earned an extension fee of 5bp. The loan pays an interest margin of 105bp over Libor. The borrowers will pay any excess interest rate beyond a 40bp difference between TAIFX and Libor. Cal-Comp Electronics is a subsidiary of Taiwanese electronics contract manufacturer New Kinpo Group. For full allocations, see www.ifre.com.

VIETNAM DEBT CAPITAL MARKETS › SAI GON HA NOI EYES DOLLAR DEBUT SAI GON HA NOI COMMERCIAL JOINT STOCK BANK, rated B2 (stable) by Moody’s, has mandated Citigroup and HSBC as joint global coordinators and joint bookrunners for a proposed Reg S offering of US dollar bonds, subject to market conditions. The Vietnamese bank, listed on the Hanoi Stock Exchange, will hold investor meetings in Singapore, Hong Kong and London, starting on Monday. The proposed notes will be issued off the bank’s newly established euro MTN programme and have an expected B2 rating from Moody’s. The bank has no outstanding foreigncurrency bonds, according to Refinitiv data.

8* Bank of America

1

224.1

4.8

10 Krung Thai

1

140.9

3.0

Total

30

4,704.8

Source: Refinitiv data

SYNDICATED LOANS › VINFAST CLOSES DOWNSIZED LOAN VINFAST TRADING AND PRODUCTION,

a unit of Vietnamese conglomerate VINGROUP, has closed a smaller-than-planned US$575m fiveyear financing after attracting 14 lenders in general syndication. The transaction’s overall size was reduced as Vinfast borrowed US$310m instead of the planned US$400m through Facility A, which carries a guarantee from Vingroup. The proceeds will be used to refinance part of its debt and to fund capital expenditure. Parent Vingroup, meanwhile, raised US$265m through Facility B, exercising part of a US$100m greenshoe option. The loan originally had a US$200m base size. Deutsche Bank, HSBC, Maybank and Taipei Fubon Commercial Bank were the original mandated lead arrangers and bookrunners of the loan, while Bank of China and Union Bank of Taiwan joined as MLABs prior to launch into general syndication. The transaction paid top-level all-in pricing of 369bp and 334bp based on interest margins of 335bp and 305bp over Libor for facilities A and B respectively. The average margin across the loans for both borrowers is 325bp over Libor, while the average life is 4.1 years. Last May, Vingroup subsidiary and healthcare provider Vinmec International General Hospital closed an increased US$360m three-year senior secured term Top bookrunners of all Vietnamese dong bonds 1/1/19 – 31/12/19

1 Techcombank 2 Vietcombank Total

Issues

%

69 32,559,000.0

97.9

700,000.0

The syndication of a US$200m loan for VPBANK has closed with seven banks joining. Maybank was the sole coordinator for the one-year loan, which had a base size of US$150m and a US$50m greenshoe option that was entirely exercised. First Abu Dhabi Bank, Taishin International Bank and Taiwan Shin Kong Commercial Bank joined as mandated lead arrangers and bookrunners. The loan paid a top-level all-in pricing of 320bp based on an interest margin of 260bp over Libor. For full allocations, see www.ifre.com.

FINANCE

› BIDV’S LOAN ATTRACTS TWO JOINT STOCK COMMERCIAL BANK FOR INVESTMENT & DEVELOPMENT OF VIETNAM has increased its oneyear refinancing to US$120m from US$100m, although the deal attracted only two banks in limited syndication. United Overseas Bank was the sole mandated lead arranger and bookrunner of the deal and ended up with US$95m. Taishin International Bank joined as an MLA with US$15m, while DZ Bank came in as a participant with US$10m. The deal pays an interest margin of 100bp over Libor. Funds are to refinance a similar sized one-year facility that closed in 2018. In November 2018, BIDV completed a US$300m borrowing with Asian Development Bank as the sole MLAB. That loan comprises a US$200m A loan with ADB as sole lender and a US$100m B loan that attracted 12 banks in general syndication. The B loan comprises a US$30m three-year tranche B1 and a US$70m five-year tranche B2. The three and five-year pieces paid toplevel all-ins of 130bp and 173.3bp based on interest margins of 110bp and 160bp over Libor, respectively, and average lives of 2.5 years and 3.15 years.

1/1/19 – 31/12/19

Vnd(m)

3

› VPBANK FINANCE’S LOAN DRAWS SEVEN

Vietnam global equity and equity-related

Amount Name

loan that offered a top-level all-in of 327.43bp based on an interest margin of 300bp over Libor and an average life of 2.9166 years. In July 2018, Vinfast wrapped up a US$400m five-year loan that paid a top-level all-in pricing of 370.38bp based on a margin of 350bp over Libor and an average life of 3.925 years. For full allocations, see www.ifre.com.

2.1

72 33,259,000.0

Amount Name

US$(m)

%

201.3

61.8

2

124.2

38.2

3

325.5

1 Jefferies LLC

1

2 Credit Suisse Total

*Market volume

Issues

Proportional credit

Source: Refinitiv data

SDC Code: AS25

International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

Source: Refinitiv data

55


ASIA DATA LAST WEEK’S ECM DEALS Stock

Country Date

Amount

Price

Deal type

Bharti Airtel

India

Rs144bn

Rs445

Follow-on (primary)

08/01/2020

Bookrunner(s) Axis, Citigroup, JP Morgan, BNP Paribas, BofA, Goldman Sachs, HDFC,HSBC

Shanghai Gench Education Group

China

10/01/2020

HK$605m

HK$6.05

IPO (primary)

Macquarie, Haitong International

Huijing Holdings

China

10/01/2020 HK$1.52bn

HK$1.93

IPO (primary)

China Galaxy International, CCB International,

Activation Group

China

10/01/2020

HK$404m

HK$2.02

IPO (primary)

WuXi Biologics

China

10/01/2020

HK$5.8bn

HK$96.05 Follow-on (secondary)

Morgan Stanley

Sunac China

China

10/01/20

HK$8bn

HK$42.80 Follow-on (primary)

Morgan Stanley

Alibaba Health Information Technology

China

09/01/20

HK$791m

HK$9.42

Follow-on (secondary)

Goldman Sachs

Jiumaojiu International

China

09/01/20

HK$2.2bn

HK$6.60

IPO (primary)

CMB International, CICC

Beijing Enterprises Urban

China

08/01/20

HK$621m

HK$0.69

IPO (primary)

DBS, Haitong International

Xinyi Solar

China

07/01/20

HK$1.79bn

HK$5.125

Follow-on (secondary)

HSBC

Luckin Coffee

China

09/01/20

US$580m

US$42

Follow-on

Credit Suisse, Morgan Stanley, CICC, Haitong International

CMB International, Guotai Junan International Dongxing Securities, CMB International and Haitong Sec

Resources Group

(primary+secondary) Source: IFR Asia

LAST WEEK’S EQUITY-LINKED ISSUANCE Issuer

Country

Bharti Airtel

Maturity Coupon/YTM % Premium (%)

Bookrunner

08/01/2020 US$750m US$250m

5 years

1.5%/2%

20%

BNP Paribas, Barclays, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs,

China

09/01/2020 US$150m

6 years

2%

25%

China

09/01/2020 US$400m

5 years

0.75%

30%

India

Date

Amount Greenshoe

JP Morgan, DBS Shandong Weigao Group

Credit Suisse

Medical Polymer Luckin Coffee

US$60m

Credit Suisse, Morgan Stanley, CICC, Haitong International

Source: IFR Asia

MERRILL LYNCH ASIAN DOLLAR INDEX Index

Description

Index level

1 week total return

ADIG

Asian-dollar high-grade index

437.320

0.361

1 month total return 3 months total return 0.686

0.467

122

ADHY

Asian-dollar high-yield index

685.824

0.746

2.490

4.220

526

AGIG

Asian-dollar government high-grade index

411.725

0.317

0.589

0.185

99

AGHY

Asian-dollar government high-yield index

813.455

0.817

2.678

3.281

416

ACIG

Asian-dollar corporate high-grade index

464.185

0.379

0.724

0.568

131

ACHY

Asian-dollar corporate high-yield index

563.076

0.736

2.463

4.375

542

Source: Merrill Lynch

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International Financing Review Asia January 11 2020

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