The Malaysian state-owned electricity company Tenaga Nasional Berhad has completed a deal to replace just over half of its shortest-dated debt with 10-year financing. The deal involved two interlinked parts; a new US$600 million 10-year bond offer, and a cash tender offer for existing Tenaga short-dated bonds, consisting of US$300 million of 7.2% notes due on April 29, 2007, which have a put option in April 2002, and $600 million of 7.875% bonds due on June 15 2004. The size of the 10-year bond was not initially fixed, but depended on the level of redemption of the shorter dated bonds, given that the 10-year issue was not primarily designed to raise new finance, but to replace the two outstanding bonds, so as to increase the overall maturity of Tenaga's outstanding debt. The tender price was set at 120 basis points (bps) over for the 2004 bonds and 80 bps over for the puttable 2002. The tender offer was launched just slightly ahead of the bond offer, and to provide the 10-year bond's joint lead managers, Lehman Brothers, HSBC, and CIMB, with an early idea of interest in the tender, the tender offer's deal managers, Lehman and HSBC, effectively penalized investors participating after the first 10 days of the 20-day tender period (a period mandated by SEC regulations), by offering them 3% less. Because it was considered attractively priced, the tender take-up was above what HSBC and Lehman had expected, with 53% of the outstandings redeemed, worth US$479 million at par value, for which Tenaga paid around US$517 million. The Baa3/BBB rated power company then launched a US$500 million Rule 144a Regulation S 10-year global bond issue. The issue size was then increased to US$600 million, and priced at 99.594, with a coupon of 7.625%, to yield 295 bps over US Treasuries.
April 01, 2001