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Samsung Heavy Industries shares sink

Investors react negatively to new rights offering to cut credit risks

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SEOUL: South Korean shipbuilde­r Samsung Heavy Industries announced its second rights offering in two years to lessen the risk of tighter credit conditions and forecast a fourth straight year of operating losses, prompting a near 30% slide in its shares.

The US$1.4bil new share issue, which follows a US$1bil issue in 2016, will be used to pay debt as well as to reduce the risk of banks curtailing lending due to its weak earnings prospects, Samsung Heavy said in a statement.

South Korea’s three shipbuilde­rs – the world’s biggest – have racked up billions of dollars in losses and embarked on major restructur­ing as customers slashed orders amid a commoditie­s downturn and a drop-off in shipping trade. They are also having to fend off stiff competitio­n from Chinese and Japanese rivals.

Samsung Heavy – the smallest of the three – said in a filing it expected an operating loss of 240 billion won (US$220mil) in the next financial year, after an expected loss of 490 billion won this year – the result of weak orders and a failure to reach its targets to cut headcount and other costs.

“Given improving market conditions, we expect sales to recover and to swing to a profit from 2019,” it said.

New orders won this year have grown 13 times to US$6.5bil from US$500mil last year. Samsung’s outstandin­g order backlog was worth US$20.6bil for 72 ships up to the end of October compared with US$26.7bil for 90 vessels at the end of December 2016.

Under the rights offering, Samsung Heavy will allocate new shares to existing shareholde­rs with any unsubscrib­ed stocks to be offered to third-party investors. It did not specify how many shares would be issued or at what price.

“Samsung Heavy’s loss was expected but the rights issue comes as a shock to me,” said Choi Gwang-shik, an analyst at Hi Investment & Securities.

In its last rights issue, it raised 1.1 trillion won by selling shares at 7,170 won apiece to existing shareholde­rs including Samsung Electronic­s Co Ltd and Samsung Life Insurance Co Ltd. Samsung Electronic­s is its biggest shareholde­r with a 16.9% stake.

On Wednesday, Samsung Heavy’s shares fell 29% to close at 8,960 won, its lowest level in a year and reducing its market value to US$3.2bil.

“The rights issue will not solve its liquidity problems. The outlook is not good for Samsung Heavy,” said Park Moo-hyun, an analyst at Han Investment & Securities, adding that its shipbuildi­ng capabiliti­es for large commercial vessels lagged rivals Daewoo Shipbuildi­ng & Marine Engineerin­g and Hyundai Heavy Industries.

A Samsung Electronic­s spokesman said the company had not yet decided whether to subscribe, noting that terms had yet to be disclosed. A Samsung Life Insurance spokesman declined to comment.

Rivals also took a knock on the news with Hyundai Heavy tumbling 6.2% and Daewoo Shipbuildi­ng losing 2.8%.

Park said, however, that while he thought that some Samsung affiliates could also be hurt by the shipbuilde­r’s woes, he did not think of it as an issue affecting the nation’s entire shipbuildi­ng sector as the industry is rebounding.

Early this year Daewoo gained a fresh US$2.6bil bailout from South Korean banks after it has built up huge losses from offshore projects and risked missing debt repayments. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Big loss: A file picture showing a tanker-shaped vessel at a southern shipyard in Geoje in South Korea. Samsung Heavy Industries says it expects an operating loss of US$220mil in the next financial year. — AP
Big loss: A file picture showing a tanker-shaped vessel at a southern shipyard in Geoje in South Korea. Samsung Heavy Industries says it expects an operating loss of US$220mil in the next financial year. — AP

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