Daily Mail

Rolls-Royce races to raise £5bn as it fights for survival

- By James Salmon

BRITISH engineerin­g titan Rolls- Royce has unveiled plans to raise £5bn in emergency funds as it scrambles for survival.

the aircraft engine maker intends to go cap in hand to shareholde­rs to help shore up its finances which have been devastated by the Covid-19 pandemic.

If approved by the treasury, the £ 2bn rights issue could unlock another £1bn loan from the Government’s UK trade finance body, UK Export Finance.

Rolls also plans to borrow another £1bn by issuing new bonds to investors and said it has secured a £1bn loan on top of this.

the sheer scale of the fundraisin­g underlines the desperate plight of the world-renowned business, which has become one of the biggest corporate casualties of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

shares fell another 10.2pc, or 13.2p, to a 17-year low of 116.8p – taking losses so far this year to 83pc. two years ago shares were worth more than £10 each. RollsRoyce is now valued at just £2.2bn – less than half the £5bn market cap of discount retailer B&M.

Rolls has already announced it intends to lay off 9,000 staff to slash costs and sell off parts of the business to raise £2billion. Chief executive warren East ( pictured) said the plans to raise extra cash ‘improves our resilience to navigate the current uncertain operating environmen­t’. the 58- year- old added: ‘the sudd e n and material effect of the Covid-19 pandemic has a significan­t impact on the commercial aviation industry, resulting in a sharp deteriorat­ion in the financial performanc­e of our civil aerospace business and, to a lesser extent, our power systems business.’ Rolls-Royce designs, manufactur­es and services engines and turbines for the defence, marine and oil and gas industries. But the company is particular­ly reliant on the civil aerospace business which accounts for just over half of its revenues. the engineer makes money not from selling engines, but on payments airlines make when its engines are flying. this ‘power-by-hour’ model typically generates around £4bn a year for the firm. Flying hours have roughly halved since the pandemic started, with planes grounded around the world.

Last month, Rolls-Royce slid to a £5.4bn half-year loss as the company was battered by the downturn in air travel.

Russ Mould, investment director at stockbroke­r aJ Bell, said: ‘Once seen as a shining light of British industry, Rolls been laid low by a combinatio­n of events which range from technical problems with its engines to a global pandemic which has hammered global demand for air travel and aircraft.

‘this has left the company looking for cash to try to see it through the downturn to make sure it can come out the other side so it can capitalise on the eventual upturn in global travel.’

Experts said the coronaviru­s pandemic came at the worst time for Rolls- Royce, which has already spent billions to resolve technical problems with some of its aircraft engines. the firm has been exploring a range of options to ensure it emerges from the crisis, including raising £500m by selling a stake in the company to sovereign wealth funds in singapore and Kuwait.

But it is understood Rolls ditched talks due to unease among institutio­nal shareholde­rs that it would dilute their holdings in the firm.

the company has instead turned to the Government for more help, having already borrowed £ 2bn in state- backed loans. Yesterday it said the extension of another £ 1bn loan depended on the treasury and UK Export Finance approving the £2bn fundraisin­g with existing shareholde­rs.

the Government holds a ‘golden share’ in Rolls which prevents the company from coming under foreign control as it is deemed to be of strategic interest to the UK.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom