Gulf News

Alba seeks to raise record $2.5b to fund expansion

ALUMINIUM FIRM IS RETURNING TO THE DEBT MARKET AFTER A DECADE

- — Bloomberg

Aluminium Bahrain (Alba), which is 70 per cent owned by the state, expects to pay similar yields to the government for a record borrowing plan after the nation’s credit risk fell to the lowest in almost a year.

The metalmaker, known as Alba, plans to raise $2.5 billion (Dh9.1 billion) from bonds, Islamic finance, and export credit, chief executive officer (CEO) Laurent Schmitt said on July 30. The cost to insure Bahrain’s debt against non-payment for five years fell almost twice as much as the regional average this quarter, according to data provider CMA. The island kingdom sold $1.5 billion of 10-year bonds at 6.125 per cent in June.

Alba is returning to the debt market after a decade to fund a plan to boost production even as US and European competitor­s shut plants. The company, which benefits from subsidised regional energy costs, is betting aluminium prices will rebound from the past year’s 22 per cent slump. Bahrain’s economic growth will quicken to 3 per cent this year from 1.8 per cent in 2011, forecasts compiled by Bloomberg show.

Credit risk

“Given the government’s majority ownership, which gives lenders additional comfort with regard to the credit risk, Alba should be able to achieve an attractive cost of funding,” Chavan Bhogaita, head of the markets strategy group at National Bank of Abu Dhabi, said. “There is likely to be decent appetite based on the demand we witnessed for the government’s latest issue.”

Bahrain, rated at Standard & Poor’s second-lowest investment grade of BBB, received more than $6 billion in bids for the bonds it sold in June, suggesting investors are confident in the stability of the nation that was affected in the six-member Gulf Cooperatio­n Council (GCC) by popular unrest in Arab countries last year.

Regional investors bought 43 per cent of the bonds, while 32 per cent were from Europe, 14 per cent from the US, and 11 per cent from Asia, the government said in a statement in June.

Bahrain’s five-year credit default swaps fell 70 basis points this quarter to 275 yesterday, the lowest since August 10, 2011, according to CMA, which is owned by McGrawHill Cos. and compiles prices quoted by dealers in the privately negotiated market. That outpaced the average 36 basispoint decline to 181 of the four GCC countries for which the contracts are traded.

Similar to sovereign debt

“The pricing is likely to be similar to Bahraini debt, since we are 70 per cent government­owned,” Alba’s chief finance and supply officer Tim Murray said on a July 30 conference call from Bahrain’s capital Manama. “All in all, 6 per cent is fairly favourable.”

Alba said on July 23 it hired Paris-based BNP Paribas to advise on financing. It plans to use the funds to add a sixth potline to its smelter to produce 400,000 metric tonnes a year, boosting total capacity to 1.3 million tonnes by 2015.

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