CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 69% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.
CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 69% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.

Ben Bernanke helps Twiggy Forrest

Article By: ,  Financial Analyst

Australian listed iron ore producer Fortescue metals emerged from a trading halt today after it successfully managed to secure new funding which will replace existing debts due to mature. It has been a tough few months for the single commodity exporter – first the iron ore price tumble and then rumours in the market around the unease of its lenders. Shares have accordingly fallen from an all year high of $6.18 to $2.99 when trading was halted last Thursday. Today’s news brings with it a cover rally with the stock up more than 15% in early afternoon Sydney trading.

We recently wrote about the iron ore price in our piece titled “Is the Chinese growth story over?” In it we stated “A further selloff in iron ore stocks could provide a great medium term trading opportunity for those with patience – BHP, Rio Tinto, Atlas Iron and Fortescue Metals could all represent compelling value at current prices.” Rio Tinto has bounced around 15% of its recent lows. BHP is also trending higher. The iron ore spot traded price has bounced from a low in the mid US$80s per tonne to above US$100 per tonne over the past week. Confidence is being restored.

Fortescue’s ability to raise a new US$4.5bn facility is important for many other industrial companies globally, not just those in mining. US 5 year treasury notes are currently yielding around 70 basis points. The lenders of the new facility to Twiggy Forrest’s Fortesue – Credit Suisse and JP Morgan – will fund the loan through the US debt market where debt is cheap thanks to Ben Bernanke.

The incentive for banks to take on risk – like lending to Fortescue – is too hard to resist. Fortescue did not disclose the cost of funding but there is no doubt the lenders would be writing up a solid margin. Loans will have the backing of Fortescue’s Pilbara assets – very strategically attractive. So it comes as somewhat of a ‘win/win’ situation, for now.

If an emerging iron ore producer, with single commodity risk and subject to short selling from US hedge fund guru Jim Chanos can manage to score such a large lending package, then other corporates will no doubt see the current interest rate environment as a once in a lifetime opportunity to secure cheap, longer term debt. This will help finance growth, like Fortescue’s plans to treble its iron ore production to around 155 million tonnes per annum. We see this as a small anecdote in what could be a very important theme for 2013 – the use of historically low priced debt to exploit depressed corporate valuations. We are now closely watching for other key mergers and acquisitions or leveraged buyouts by private equity players to develop in the next few weeks.

 

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