IFR Asia – January 20, 2018

(Axel Boer) #1
COUNTRY REPORT SINGAPORE

handled Noble’s global oil liquids
business, and repaid the borrowing base
facilities.
The estimated net proceeds of US$400m
from the sale, include the cash from
previously announced sales of NAC
subsidiaries and was lower than the
estimated US$575m determined on October
1 2017, primarily due to operating losses
the group generated from then until the
closing date.
Noble, at one time one of the world’s
biggest commodity traders, had previously
announced sales of its gas-and-power units,
namely Noble Americas Gas & Power, Noble
Americas South Bend Ethanol and MR Coal
Marketing & Trading.
In December, the group said it had
obtained a waiver from creditors to extend
covenants on a loan facility to May this
year, giving it more time for its debt-
restructuring negotiations. The covenants
had already been extended twice until mid-
December as the group battled to recover
from two years of crisis.
In early November, Noble reported a
third-quarter loss of US$1.17bn, versus a
loss of US$28m a year earlier.


› FIRST REIT RAISING FUNDS


FIRST REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT TRUST has said it is
raising a multi-tranche secured loan of up
to S$400m (US$303m) with OCBC Bank as
mandated lead arranger, bookrunner and
underwriter.
The borrowin is made up of Singapore
dollar term loans of three, four and five
years, as well as a three-year revolving
credit facility in Singapore or US dollars.
Each tranche will be for up to S$100m.


Funds will be used partially to refinance
bank loans, fund property investments and
meet working capital needs.
The Singapore-listed borrower invests in
healthcare and healthcare-related real-estate
assets. First REIT’s portfolio has 20 properties
in Indonesia, Singapore and South Korea.
Bowsprit Capital manages the REIT.

RESTRUCTURING


› GATE COMPLETES RESTRUCTURING

Semiconductor assembly-and-test company
GLOBAL A&T ELECTRONICS said its restructuring
plan had gone into effect on approval from
a US court.
The restructuring will cut the company’s
debt to US$665m from US$1.12bn.
“The closing of our restructuring is
the culmination of hard work and strong
support from our equity sponsors and
noteholders, who have been constructive
partners throughout our restructuring
process,” said CEO W John Nelson.
The restructuring will also resolve all
litigation by bondholders. Some holders
of Gate’s US$625m 10% senior secured
bonds due 2019 issued in February 2013
had taken legal action after the company
later converted a second lien loan into an
additional US$502m of the same series of
notes.
Gate will issue US$665m in 8.5% secured
notes due 2022, up from 7.75% on its
previous one. The initial holders will
receive US$517.64m of new notes, plus
US$8.89m in cash, and the additional
holders will receive US$84.9m in notes
and shares equivalent to a 31% stake in

Singapore-headquartered UTAC Holdings,
the parent of Gate, as part of a corporate
reorganisation.
Holders of the initial notes that sued Gate
over the conversion of the loan will receive
an additional US$11.11m of new secured
notes and US$1.11m in cash.

› EZRA GETS COURT EXTENSION

The US Bankruptcy Court for the Southern
District of New York has given EZRA
HOLDINGS until February 18 to file a plan of
reorganisation under Chapter 11, and until
April 12 to solicit acceptances for the plan
under an exclusivity period.
Previously, Ezra had until November 13
2017 to propose a restructuring plan and no
other parties were allowed to seek votes for
other plans before January 12.
The Singapore-listed offshore marine
services provider last year missed coupon
payments on its S$150m (US$113m) 4.875%
bonds, which mature on April 24 this year.

EQUITY CAPITAL MARKETS


› SASSEUR REIT DELAYS IPO

SASSEUR REIT has delayed the launch of
its S$500m–$600m (US$378m–$454m)
Singapore Exchange IPO from January to
after the Lunar New Year, according to two
persons with knowledge of the move.
They did not give the reason for the delay.
The company would need to update its
financials for a launch date after January,
said one of the two to explain the reason
for delay until after the Lunar New Year
(February 16–17).

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