KUALA LUMPUR: After successfully selling its inaugural US$500mil
(RM1.6bil) 5.5-year dollar bonds which was oversubscribed by six times, Export-Import Bank of Malaysia Bhd (Exim Bank)
is looking at launching a similar bond issue with at least the same
value next year to support its targeted 20% year-on-year loan growth.
Source From (The Star Online): http://biz.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2012/6/28/business/11552622&sec=business
Published: Monday June 28, 2012
Its managing director and chief executive officer Datuk Adissadikin Ali said the second issue would be launched if the market conditions warranted it and met the bank's business needs.
“Bonds
issuance is a good alternative for our funding needs. If we can address
the issue of pricing (from external borrowings) and maturity tenure of
our loans effectively via bonds, than we will fund through the bond way.
Judging from the response of Exim Bank's inaugural debt issue and the
good take up rate, we feel tapping the international capital market via
bonds is a good alternative form of financing,'' he told StarBiz in an interview.
Adissadikin
said plans entailed that the second issue would at least have a similar
bond value of US$500mil. The first and the proposed second issues were
part of the bank's US$1.5bil medium-term note programme.
He added
the bond issue was aimed at raising capital for the bank's expansion
and to meet its annual target growth of 20% for its loan book.
Exim Bank is targeting loan disbursements of between RM1.8bil and
RM2bil this year and was confident of achieving the target as its loan
disbursements has reached RM1.5bil in the first six months of this year.
The
bond issue, he noted would also boost the profile and credibility of
the bank on the world map. The inaugural bond issue was launched on June
7 despite the looming European sovereign debt crisis and the global
economic uncertainty.
Although there were no Government
guarantees for the issue, he said the issue was well received, backed by
Exim Bank's turnaround initiatives.
The bond issue also achieved
the lowest yield or coupon rate by any Malaysian entity for a five-year
tenure and was the first ever foreign currency bond issue by a
Malaysian development financial institution, he said, adding that it was
only about 20 basis points higher than the Malaysian Government US
dollar Bonds.
The bank returned to profitability with a net
profit of RM176.3mil for the financial year ended Dec 31, 2011 after
incurring a net loss of RM300mil a year earlier due to a combination of
key initiatives implemented to improve business and operational
effectiveness.
Adissadikin said the bank's new markets for its customers were mainly
in Asia, noting that there was growing enquiries from Malaysian
businesses planning to venture into other African countries (excluding
North Africa) and Central Asia.
The bank is rated A3 (stable) by Moody's Investor Services and the equivalent A- (stable) by Fitch, which are similar to Malaysian sovereign ratings.
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