Sunday Times

Industry emerges fitter, leaner from 5-year rout

- Bloomberg

MINING companies are getting back into financial shape and have cut the sector’s pool of distressed bonds by at least $60-billion (about R900-billion), providing another boost to the industry’s outlook as commoditie­s enter a bull market.

Anglo American and Glencore are among companies whose notes no longer feature in the ranks of distressed dollar-denominate­d debt after selling assets and cutting dividends to bolster their balance sheets, according to Bloomberg Intelligen­ce.

The amount of metals and mining bonds trading at distressed levels fell this month to $26-billion from a peak of $86-billion in February, the data shows.

“There has been a large degree of self-help, whether that’s through asset sales or cost cutting or capex rationalis­ation, to improve cash flow,” said Anthony Ip, a credit sector specialist at Citigroup in Sydney.

“At the macro level, you’ve got the rally in commoditie­s prices and the market appears more comfortabl­e with China risks, so that’s helping sentiment.”

Commoditie­s have entered a bull market, ending a five-year rout, as supply constraint­s drive up prices in everything from soybeans to zinc, while Citigroup said last month that raw materials had turned a corner following the biggest price collapse in a generation.

Mining companies have trimmed loss-making output, lowered costs and scrapped pledges to continue boosting payouts to investors to mitigate the impact of tumbling prices.

Notes issued by the likes of copper producer FreeportMc­MoRan and iron ore miner Fortescue Metals Group also are no longer trading at distressed levels, according to Bloomberg Intelligen­ce’s Richard Bourke.

The analysis examined bonds with more than $100-million outstandin­g that were trading with option-adjusted spreads greater than 1 000 basis points. Spreads that wide are often considered a definition of distress, according to Bourke.

Moody’s Investors Service, which began a sector-wide assessment of mining in January that prompted 36 rating downgrades, last month upgraded the outlook on Anglo’s Ba3 senior unsecured ratings from negative to positive as a result of better-thanexpect­ed asset sale receipts.

In April, Anglo agreed to sell its niobium and phosphate businesses for $1.5-billion.

Miners have announced $27-billion of pending and completed asset sales this year, including China Molybdenum’s $2.65-billion agreement to buy Freeport’s stake in the Tenke Fungurume copper-cobalt mine. That’s easing concern over producers’ debt even with raw materials prices trading about 50% lower than a 2011 peak.

Others haven’t been able to withstand pressure on prices. Coal producer Peabody Energy and iron ore miner Magnetatio­n are among companies to file for bankruptcy amid the slump.

Sydney-based Australian steel

There has been a large degree of self-help to improve cash flow

and iron ore supplier Arrium appointed a voluntary administra­tor in April after lenders rejected a $927-million recapitali­sation plan.

The recent rally in materials prices probably isn’t sustainabl­e as demand remains muted — particular­ly in China — and as supply continues to grow in some sectors, according to Matthew Kence, a Boston-based senior vice-president credit at Standard Life Investment­s. On Tuesday, the World Bank cut its outlook for global economic growth this year to 2.4% from a 2.9% estimate in January.

While prices will remain under pressure over the next 12 to 18 months, Moody’s will continue to examine actions by individual­s producers in assessing their ratings, said Matthew Moore, a senior analyst at the ratings agency.

“One of the things that we’ll continue to look at is the ability of companies to execute on things like asset sales for debt reduction,” Moore said. —

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