Times of Oman

Lenders reject offer from Saudi Telecom

The lenders turned down the plan because it involved taking a loss on the loan, three people said, asking not to be identified because talks are private.

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ISTANBUL: Banks rejected a Saudi Telecom plan to resolve a dispute over a missed payment on a $4.75 billion loan at a Turkish unit, prolonging a five-month impasse on the debt, people with knowledge of the matter said.

The lenders turned down the plan because it involved taking a loss on the loan, three people said, asking not to be identified because talks are private.

Saudi Telecom’s plan envisaged lending about $160 million to its Otas unit — which missed the payment — and also buying a direct stake in the business, they said. At present, the Saudi company only owns an indirect stake in Otas. Otas — which owns 55 per cent of Turk Telekom — failed to make a $290 million repayment in September on the loan, Turkey’s biggest syndicated borrowing.

A slump in the lira led to a decline in the dollar value of dividends Otas receives from the phone company and had counted on to help repay the loan, a person with knowledge of the matter said in October.

Otas has another installmen­t on the loan due in March, according to one of the people. In 2016, Turk Telekom reported its first loss since 2005, implying it won’t pay any dividend to shareholde­rs this year.

Turkish lender Akbank has about $1.5 billion in exposure to the loan — the most of any bank — while Garanti Bankasi lent about $1 billion, people with knowledge of the matter said in October. Akbank and Garanti are among six book-runners on the loan, which dates to 2013.

“Akbank is known to have a significan­t exposure to the Turk Telekom loan, thus making this news a negative catalyst,” Duygun Kutucu, a banking analyst at Istanbul-based TEB Investment, said in e-mailed comments. “There is a possibilit­y that Akbank may need write down this debt. The news is also negative for Garanti.”

No one was immediatel­y available to comment at Akbank.

Saudi Telecom indirectly owns a stake in Otas through its 35 per cent stake in Oger Telecom. Lebanon’s Hariri family own the remainder of Oger Telecom. The Turkish Treasury holds a 25 per cent stake in Turk Telekom, while the country’s newly-founded wealth fund owns 6.7 per cent.

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