The Business Times

GLP says it has identified 2025 bond repayment sources

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ASIAN logistics operator GLP told investors it has identified sources to help it repay a US$1 billion US dollar bond due 2025 and has already paid back US$1.7 billion of its other bonds this year.

Repaying the 2025 bond may include tapping the debt market and loans from its “core relationsh­ip” banks, GLP chief financial officer Nicholas Johnson said during a May 3 investor call.

About 46 per cent of the company’s debt is maturing by the end of this year, and it plans to repay that amount with cash on hand, operationa­l cash flow and proceeds from asset sales, according to filings and comments from the call.

The repayment update comes after GLP recently had its debt rating cut, and as a Chinese company explores a possible bid for a stake in one of its units.

Investors are closely monitoring the spillover effects of China’s property-sector debt crunch into regional companies like GLP, which has a majority of its revenue generated from China.

Its 3.875 per cent US dollar bond due 2025 was largely unchanged on Monday (May 6) at 89 cents on the US dollar, Bloomberg-compiled prices showed.

GLP, which is headquarte­red in Singapore, has been looking to sell some of its Chinese assets. Negotiatio­ns are still ongoing, and a major part of its Chinese business that has been earmarked for a “strategic transactio­n” has been “monetised”, Johnson said. In September, the company announced that due diligence involving the China portfolio had been completed.

GLP China still has a net asset value of over US$14 billion as at December,

he said. “We will continue towards the previously communicat­ed US$10 billion monetisati­on programme.”

As at the end of 2023, GLP had around US$2.2 billion of cash and cash equivalent­s, according to its latest financial statement. Total liabilitie­s were about US$23 billion.

S&P Global Ratings downgraded the company to junk last November – citing slower-than-expected asset monetisati­on and deteriorat­ing liquidity – before withdrawin­g the grades at the company’s request.

China’s state-owned Guangdong Holdings is considerin­g a potential bid for a controllin­g stake in GLP’S China operations, Bloomberg reported last month. GLP’S management refused to comment when asked about the matter.

 ?? PHOTO: GLP ?? GLP I-park at the Shunyi Airport economic core area north of Beijing. In September 2023, the company said that due diligence involving the China portfolio had been completed.
PHOTO: GLP GLP I-park at the Shunyi Airport economic core area north of Beijing. In September 2023, the company said that due diligence involving the China portfolio had been completed.

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