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Ukrainian steelmaker Metinvest explores bond sale as deadline for debt nears

Metinvest, the Ukrainian steel giant, is looking at a new debt issue to cover an upcoming bond payment of?nearly $430 million due in April. It has also been in talks about restructuring.

Metinvest is Ukraine's biggest?private company. However, the four years of?punishing war with Russia have?seen?it lose around half of its operations. This includes some of its largest steel and coal plants.

It paused discussions with a group bondholders earlier this month about restructuring its debt of $1,25 billion, saying that it would look at "alternative liabilities management transactions".

Metinvest CEO Yuriyryzhenkov spoke about the four-year anniversary on Tuesday of the war and its impact. He also discussed the options for the financial situation.

He said that the company was considering "many options", particularly after the poultry giant MHP became the first Ukrainian company to issue an international bond since the outbreak of the war in Ukraine 2022.

Ryzhenkov said that he was listening to the market and what investors can accept.

"We'd be happy to use a 3-year or 5-year bond. It depends on other details such as covenants and?costs of debt. We'll "have to strike a sort of balance."

What is an acceptable cost?

Metinvest will have to pay about 1-2 percentage points higher than the 10,5% MHP borrowed last month for $450 million spread over three years, according to bankers.

Alan Siow, co-head of EM Corporate Debt for Ninety One, said that this would be a very high price, and it wouldn't be sustainable over the long run. It would allow the company to retain market access, and then refinance the debt at a lower rate if the situation improved.

Ryzhenkov stated that Metinvest could also consider a private debt agreement, using existing resources or returning to the restructuring options discussed in recent months.

Ryzhenkov said there was "leeway" on the amount it would have to borrow if it chose a bond. It must make a $428-million payment by April 23 but it has some cash that could be used.

"Depending on market conditions, we could go for $300,000,000 (bonds) or $500, if we have good conversations and the cost is reasonable."

A spokesperson from Deutsche Bank, who helped organize a roadshow for Metinvest investors recently, did not immediately respond to a question about the 'potential of a bond sale.

Ryzhenkov stated that Metinvest had some time left before a decision was needed and that he took an optimistic outlook.

He said: "Either we can find a market solution that will solve everything or we'll reach an agreement with creditors to reprofile our bond."

(source: Reuters)