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MATURITY IN 2025

Emirates airline launches $750m bond

Dubai, January 31, 2013

Emirates airline, Dubai's flagship carrier, launched a $750 million 12-year amortising bond on Thursday, with final pricing due later in the day, arranging banks said.

The bond, which matures in 2025 but carries an average life of seven years, launched at 300 basis points over seven-year midswaps, at the wider end of guidance released on Wednesday.

Order books were reportedly over $1.6 billion at around 0800 GMT, IFR Markets, a unit of Thomson Reuters reported.

Market sources indicated that weakness in credit markets may have affected the borrower's ability to price at the tighter end of guidance. Moreover, regional deals normally benefit from a solid Gulf bid but the unusual amortising structure of the bond may have found limited appeal among local investors.

An amortising bond is structured in a way that gradually reduces the value of the bond over a fixed period of time, meaning the borrower pays off the full amount before the final maturity date.

The issue will begin to make coupon payments from February 2015, a document from arranging banks said.

Emirates' deal follows a substantially oversubscribed two-part bond offering from the Dubai government last week, allowing the sovereign to price the transaction at some of the lowest borrowing costs available to it.

However, the $750 million 10-year sukuk, carrying a profit rate of 3.875 per cent, was under pressure this week, trading below its par issue price.

The sukuk was bid at 98.6 cents on the dollar on Thursday afternoon, according to Thomson Reuters data. It had been trading even lower on Wednesday.

The underperformance is a result of aggressive pricing, a weak market and general pressure on sovereign borrowers, bankers and traders told IFR Markets.

Emirates last issued a bond in June 2011, with the $1 billion instrument currently trading to yield around 3.2 per cent, about 20 basis points wider than where the company announced plans to tap markets.

It has also sold Enhanced Equipment Trust Certificates (EETCs) in the last year, which are similar to a form of secured debt financing, like mortgages.

Citi, Deutsche Bank, Emirates NBD, JPMorgan Chase, Morgan Stanley and Standard Chartered are lead arrangers on Emirates' latest issue. – Reuters




Tags: UAE | Dubai | Emirates | bond |

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