US CREDIT-InBev takeover may push Anheuser near junk rating
By Anastasija Johnson
NEW YORK, June 12 (Reuters) - Belgian brewer InBev's proposed takeover of Anheuser-Busch Cos Inc (BUD.N: Quote, Profile, Research) could push the iconic Budweiser maker's debt to the brink of junk territory and send its bond spreads still wider.
InBev INTB.BR on Wednesday made a $46.3 billion bid to add Budweiser to its own Stella Artois and Beck's beers and create the world's largest brewer. For details click on [ID:nL12619037].
InBev, the world's No. 2 brewer, said it plans to finance the deal with at least $40 billion in debt and a combination of non-core asset sales and equity in a move that could basically double Anheuser-Busch leverage.
If the deal goes through, the combined company's leverage, a measure of debt to earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization, could reach 5 times compared to the current 2.4 times level at the U.S. beermaker, analysts said.
This would make InBev's announcement that it is committed to maintaining an investment grade profile hard to keep, they added.
"It's a pretty stretched balance sheet for an investment grade company," said Gimme Credit analyst Craig Hutson.
"It could be right on the cusp of investment grade versus non-investment grade. It's a very adverse effect for bondholders," Hutson added.
As of March end, Anheuser-Busch had approximately $9.1 billion of debt outstanding, which is rated "A2" and "A" by Moody's Investors Service and Standard & Poor's, the sixth highest investment grade level.
Both rating agencies said on Thursday they may downgrade the Budweiser maker because its credit measures will weaken well below its current levels if the unsolicited bid is accepted.
Anheuser said in a statement on Wednesday that it would review the merits of the proposal and decide in due course.
Under its proposal, InBev would assume current Anheuser debt. InBev CEO Carlos Brito in a webcast conference for analysts said that new debt to finance the takeover was likely to be based in the United States for tax reasons.
Merrill Lynch analyst Nico Lambrechts said in a research note on Thursday that the takeover could be completely financed with debt. For details, click on [ID:nL1219488].
While the world's fourth largest brewer shares rose 5.0 percent in afternoon trading on Thursday, its bonds weakened and the cost to insure its debt against default increased.
Anheuser-Busch's 5.5 percent notes due in 2018 widened by 14 basis points to 197 basis points over Treasuries, according to MarketAxess data.
The cost to insure its debt against default rose to about 95 basis points, or $95,000 per year to protect $10 million of debt for five years, compared to about 76 basis points on Tuesday before InBev made the bid, according to a trader.
"Given the heightened level of uncertainty for Anheuser, as well as the potential for a significant leveraging event, we still believe that investors should be buying protection on Anheuser-Busch at current levels," Barclays analysts said in a report.
While the deal makes strategic sense because it would combine InBev's big operations in Western Europe, Brazil and Canada with Anheuser's business in the U.S., Mexico and China, it could take some time for the companies to reach an agreement because Anheuser is likely to try to negotiate a higher price, analysts said. For details, click on [ID:nN12310419].
The good news for bondholders is that the combined company could generate nearly $3 billion of annual free cash flow to repay debt and quickly lower its leverage, according to Gimme Credit's Hutson.
Yet, "at the outset you are talking about a company that relative to its investment grade peers would have a much worse credit profile," Hutson said.
(Reporting by Anastasija Johnson)
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