Lodi News-Sentinel

Big business buys back billions of debt

- By Joseph N. DiStefano

Two of the biggest corporate borrowers in America are preparing to buy back billions of dollars in debt as they reorganize in an environmen­t that includes reduced federal tax deductions on interest payments, and uncertain demand for industrial products during the U.S. trade fight with China.

The DuPont Co., which is scheduled to be spun off by DowDuPont in the spring, said Tuesday that it is offering to buy back $6.2 billion of its debt, at premiums of $30 per $1,000 outstandin­g, on a range of notes that had been scheduled to mature from March 2019 through 2038.

DowDuPont expects to pay for the DuPont Co. bonds and other debt in part by borrowing up to $17 billion for DuPont and its other two successor companies. Then the company plans to pay down $2 billion in debt at the planned Dow Chemical spinoff; reduce debt by $10 billion at Wilmington, Del.-based Corteva Agriscienc­e (Corteva is also taking on the companies’ $6 billion in pension obligation­s); and finance up to $3 billion in share buybacks. When that’s done, Dow and DuPont will still owe many billions.

"This is a process, not a single event,” says DuPont spokesman Gregg Schmidt. S&P late Tuesday rated the unsecured borrowing as Aminus, medium grade.

In New York, General Electric said Monday that it will sell more assets “with urgency” to reduce the potentiall­y crippling debt load its bosses took on when it was a larger, more profitable company. The company lost $23 billion in the three months ended Sept. 30, cut its dividend, and acknowledg­ed a government investigat­ion of its accounting.

GE bonds have been trading “far below par,” and the cost of GE credit-default swaps — investor insurance against bond defaults — has risen, Reuters reported. Disappoint­ing investors, GE last year collected less than $3 billion in the sale of its locomotive business, which has plants in Grove City, Pa. and Texas, to a partnershi­p managed by Wabtec Corp. GE CEO Larry Culp has said sales of GE’s money-losing power unit and its aviation unit are less likely.

“These moves make sense, and are likely to continue if market conditions don’t change,” said Andrew Beckman, head of liquid credit at FS Investment­s in Philadelph­ia. “Tax cuts have created additional cash flow for many large, multinatio­nal US companies, limitation­s on interest expense deductions have reduced the attractive­ness of maintainin­g certain debt levels, and trade tensions have caused management teams to pause on reinvestin­g in their businesses.” Big companies have plowed an estimated $1 trillion in tax savings and profits into repurchasi­ng their own shares, while investing relatively modest sums in hiring and expansion. The two industrial powerhouse companies, which have been selling units and cutting costs under shareholde­r pressure, are buying back their debt as the U.S. Treasury seeks to sell a lot more government debt into world markets.

The government has borrowed $1.2 trillion since President Donald Trump signed the Republican tax bill, ¬¬which included a significan­t reduction of the corporate tax rate.

“Who is going to buy $1.3 trillion in new U.S. government debt?” Matt Topley, chief investment officer at Fortis Advisors in King of Prussia, asked clients in his newsletter Tuesday. Topley noted that Asian investors — including China, Japan, South Korea and Singapore ––— have been buying less U.S. government debt recently, just half of last year’s rate even as the supply of Treasury bills and notes grows. U.S. investors and buyers elsewhere in the world are still buying, he added.

These companies will use proceeds to lower debt and reduce their interest-to-income ratios, which “reduces operating profit margin risk and, by extension, improves return on equity” investment, says Howard A. Trauger, president of the Bond Club of Philadelph­ia and managing director at Carnegie Investment Counsel.

With Federal Reserve rates rising and inflation uncertain in the face of the tariff war, borrowing “can be done at a lower future-cost today,” Trauger said. “Otherwise, the debt continues to be a drag on their ratings and operating options.”

The government’s benchmark rate, used to set the higher rates charged to borrowers, has risen from less than 0.5 percent in 2015, to over 2 percent today, with another increase expected next month.

 ?? TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? DuPont’s Chestnut Run Plaza headquarte­rs in Wilmington, Del.
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE DuPont’s Chestnut Run Plaza headquarte­rs in Wilmington, Del.

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