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Enron Mail |
Another article from the competitive intelligence group. =20
Jeff ----- Forwarded by Jeffrey A Shankman/HOU/ECT on 02/09/2001 12:55 PM ----- =09Robert Johnston =0902/09/2001 12:50 PM =09=09=20 =09=09 To: Jeff Kinneman/HOU/ECT@ECT =09=09 cc: Paul Pizzolato/HOU/ECT@ECT, Seung-Taek Oh/NA/Enron@ENRON, Brenda= n=20 Fitzsimmons/NA/Enron@Enron, Gary Hickerson/HOU/ECT@ECT, Darren=20 Delage/AP/Enron@Enron, Kimberly Landry/NA/Enron@Enron, Scott=20 Tholan/Corp/Enron@Enron, Jeffrey A Shankman/HOU/ECT@ECT =09=09 Subject: Asian Credit Watch- AP & P Per our conversations with most of you this week, Brendan and I have=20 developed the following information on Asian Pulp & Paper and its potential= =20 to trigger widescale credit problems in Asia. In the past week, APP has co= me=20 close to default through complex trigger clauses in a mass of junk bond=20 issues. Prospects of an APP default have already sent tremors through the= =20 Asian bond market and could have larger implications for emerging market=20 debt. This week, the Indonesian government further complicated the picture = by=20 attaching assets of the Sinar Mas group, including APP, to guarantees of=20 Sinar Mas group=01,s $1.5 billion debt to Bank Internasional Indonesia (BII= ),=20 Indonesia=01,s fifth largest bank and formerly part of a Sinar Mas group. = The=20 Wijaya family is likely to postpone payments until the last possible minute= ,=20 before seeking a workout and corporate restructuring. RJ The Immediate Problem o $1.6 billion in bonds are due in 2001, on top of $1.5 billion owed to the= =20 Indonesian government through the Sinar Mas group o Between now and April 30, the APP group must come up with $145 million fo= r=20 nine separate coupon payments coming due. APP itself will owe $87 million i= n=20 interest payments on four bonds over the next month o APP missed a February 1 deadline for two bond payments of $43 million; on= e=20 payment has been made but the other, of $13.5 million, is still hanging Risks are formidable, with management playing a cat and mouse game with bon= d=20 holders in order to maximize their negotiating position in a restructuring: o Assets are encumbered by complex cross-guarantees that make it difficult = to=20 impossible to separate out individual properties o The New York Stock Exchange has threatened a de-listing unless APP stock= =20 rises above the US$1 level; de-listing will trigger immediate redemption=20 clauses in some classes of bonds o The company=01,s Indonesian assets are diseased. Despite APP=01,s apparen= tly=20 sound business model, it is being corrupted by crime that is systemic withi= n=20 the Indonesian forestry and forest products industry o Inventory dumping by APP, particularly in China, has been a major factor= =20 depressing paper prices since mid-2000 o APP=01,s management has failed to offer transparent explanations for thei= r=20 cash shortages. It has not reported third quarter earnings for 2000, due la= st=20 November, to the US Securities and Exchange Commission (although, as a=20 foreign company it has six months to report earnings, versus one month for = US=20 companies). Inter-company transfers may be masking serious problems within= =20 the APP group.=20 o Indonesian political instability is worsening with the threatened=20 impeachment of Indonesia=01,s President Wahid, lowering prospects for a=20 government bailout of APP=01,s parent company, the Sinar Mas group, and its= =20 owners, the Wijaya family. o There are clear prospects for collateral damage to Asian capital markets,= =20 with S&P already cutting ratings and a consequent shrinkage of liquidity.= =20 APP Risk Profile: APP=01,s only immediate hope of meeting its debt payments is through asset = sales=20 or a sell-off of pulp and paper inventory. Neither has much chance of=20 success. APP=01,s current strategy is to muscle its bond-holders into a=20 restructuring agreement as soon as possible, most likely before an early=20 March deadline for its next coupon payment falls due. There are significant= =20 obstacles to evaluation of assets in a restructuring, from cross-guarantees= =20 of bond issues that range across classes of bond holders and various=20 jurisdictions, to inter-company transfers that present a false picture of= =20 financial health in some of its operating companies. Such obstacles ensure= =20 that a restructuring exercise will be lengthy. APP is the fifth largest=20 issuer of junk bonds in the world, and has been regarded as a benchmark bon= d=20 for Indonesia. Until the last few months, it was the only bond in the world= =20 that traded at a premium to its own government=01,s bonds, and was the only= =20 Indonesian issuer to raise funds successfully from capital markets in the= =20 depth of the Asian crisis. A pronounced ripple effect is likely on Asian=20 bonds in the event of a default, as investors wait to see what happens to= =20 unsecured creditors who account for 40 percent to 50 percent of APP=01,s US= $12=20 billion in debt. At the moment, systemic fallout seems likely to be limited= =20 to the Asian region, as investors revert to the hostile stance adopted duri= ng=20 the Asian financial crisis.=20 APP Key Decision Makers: The key decision makers at APP are CFO Hendrik Tse and CEO Teguh Ganda=20 Wijaya. No others in the company are privy to all the Group=01,s Affairs, o= r to=20 corporate strategy. Information is extremely closely held. Sources say that= =20 the APP situation is so complex that no one individual has a comprehensive= =20 understanding of all the potential ramifications of a decision on any one o= f=20 the assets of APP or its subsidiaries, so complex are the cross guarantees= =20 and trigger clauses in the debt paper issued over the last few years. Tee and Teguh Wijaya are to a large extent playing a bluff game, engaging i= n=20 brinkmanship with their bond holders. It signaled the market that it could= =20 move into a default situation on February 1 when its paper making subsidiar= y,=20 Pabrik Kertas Tjiwi Kimiah, failed to make payments on two different bond= =20 issues worth $43 million. On February 6, APP finally paid the coupon on one= =20 of the bonds, a US$600 million note issued by Tjiwi Kimia Finance Mauritius= ,=20 just within a grace period of five business days. If Tjiwi Kimia had failed= =20 to meet the deadline, it would have triggered cross default clauses on a=20 series of other bonds. The second coupon payment, of $13.5 million, for a= =20 US$200 million issue of guaranteed senior notes due in 2001, is now late. W= e=20 expect APP to wait until the last possible moment to make the payment. The= =20 group is husbanding its cash in advance of an expected restructuring. The= =20 better its cash position is, the more APP will be able to operate from a=20 position of strength in a restructuring negotiation.=20 According to one source: APP is =01&signaling the market and its bond holde= rs=20 that it is in their best interest to help with a restructuring before=20 everything collapse. The idea is to squeeze the bondholders now, while they= =20 still have some negotiating leverage rather than wait until there is nothin= g=20 left.=018 APP is trying to play off one set of bond holders against another= =20 because the interests of the bond holders in the operating companies, some = of=20 which have significant cash flow, is different from those in the parent. Th= is=20 is obviously a dangerous game, but one in which APP feels it has no choice= =20 but to engage. The earlier it can restructure the better of it will be, and= =20 the greater its chances of survival in some form. Trying to keep control of= =20 the situation so that it doesn=01,t unravel is the name of the game at this= =20 point. Tee and Widjaja are thinking quite far ahead and have targeted their= =20 non-core subsidiaries for disposal in a debt restructuring. They have been= =20 actively shopping their China assets for several months, and sources indica= te=20 that their packaging assets will also go on the block. APP is still hopeful= ,=20 however, of engineering a debt restructuring so that it is on their terms. One of the issues that adds greatly to the complexity of the situation is= =20 that much of the sales from both companies come from within the group, and= =20 often these go via another APP company or Sinar Mas. Another source said,= =20 =01&This is a vertically integrated group and one of the worries is that if= you=20 start messing with the structure, let=01,s say one group of bond holders wa= nts=20 to wind up one of the subsidiaries that is a primary customer, you could=20 threaten the whole group.=018=20 The Wijayas are well regarded by foreign investors, and are not in the=20 category of Suharto cronies such as forestry magnate Bob Hassan, who was=20 sentenced this past week to two years in jail for financial wrongdoings and= =20 corruption. They are not saints =01) the Indonesian government removed the= =20 Wijayas from the board of Bank Internasional Indonesia after it was=20 nationalized in 1999, based on evidence that they exceeded the 30 percent c= ap=20 for lending to affiliates. However, they depend heavily on international=20 capital markets for funding and cannot afford significant steps that would= =20 bar future access. At the moment, they have few alternatives to raise cash = to=20 meet their debt payments other than through asset and inventory sales. The= =20 company has built up substantial paper inventory, and according to one=20 source, it could use inventory sales to meet current cash obligations if it= =20 could find a buyer. This is a big if, however, since current prices are=20 depressed and releasing further inventory to the market would only make=20 matters worse. Asset Sales and Other Alternatives to Meet Debt Repayments: An executive from a major international pulp and paper company confirmed th= at=20 APP was actively trying to sell its Chinese assets. These assets include: o PT Ekamas Fortuna o PT Purinusa Ekapersada o Ningbo Zhonghua Paper o Gold Hongye Paper o Gold Hai Paper (Kunshan) Co. o Jin Yu (Qingyuan) Tissue Paper Industry The executive said that his company had looked at attractive parts of the= =20 assets on offer, but had held back because of the impenetrable cross=20 guarantees between companies and reluctance of their bankers to finance an= =20 acquisition at a discount that would offer no cover for their equity. The= =20 executive believed that all the banks would have to agree to asset sales in= =20 the context of a general restructuring before any individual bank would=20 finance an acquisition. Yet another issue is that the financing of the Chin= a=20 factories was based on access to Indonesian pulp at intra-company prices.= =20 Once the company is broken up into pieces, it will have to rely on the worl= d=20 market and will no longer be able to produce at a profit. =20 Stora Enso made a formal bid for the assets last year but was rejected. It = is=20 said to remain interested although the price it is willing to pay will be= =20 considerably less. One of the problems with APP=01,s brinkmanship strategy = is=20 that it is lowering the value of its assets. Companies will not be willing = to=20 pay book value when it comes time for the company to sell off its non-core= =20 assets.=20 Restructuring is imminent, creating opportunities for investors: o A restructuring of the company in the near term seems inevitable and will= =20 produce returns for existing bond holders if they bought at low enough pric= es=20 and if their debt is secured by APP assets outside Indonesia o A restructuring will release some of APP=01,s assets, which are considere= d=20 attractive except for those in Indonesia. APP is the world=01,s low cost=20 producer of pulp and paper, with substantial assets in Indonesia, China, an= d=20 India. Its Chinese factories are attractive despite current over-capacity i= n=20 the domestic Chinese market. APP accounts for 20 percent of the Chinese=20 market for printing and fine paper.=20 o Some play is available from price volatility as APP continues to tease=20 investors by keeping them guessing about its actual cash situation
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