Intelsat Bonds Fall on Fears Over FCC Auction Plan
January 30 2020 - 1:45PM
Dow Jones News
By Matt Wirz
Satellite operator Intelsat SA's bonds hit record lows Thursday
as fears grew that the company will receive far less than expected
when the Federal Communications Commission auctions off the C-band
spectrum the company uses for its video and radio services.
Intelsat bonds were the most actively traded corporate debt
securities in the U.S. Thursday morning with about $830 million
face amount changing hands, accounting for roughly 6% of all
trading, according to data from MarketAxess. The firm's 9.5% bond
due 2023 fell to a record low of 43 cents on the dollar, down from
56 cents Wednesday and 71 cents last week.
Thursday's moves marked the latest turn in a rollercoaster-ride
for traders who have placed big bets on the company's fortunes. The
company has about $14 billion of debt outstanding, giving hedge
funds a venue to wager heavily on the outcome of the auction, which
will free up use of the C-band for new fifth-generation, or 5G,
wireless networks.
The trade punished large bondholders in November when the FCC
rejected a proposal by Intelsat and others to auction the spectrum
privately, then prices rebounded in December when rumors circulated
that the company and the FCC were discussing a compromise, analysts
said
Selling started early this week, then accelerated Wednesday when
Reuters reported that the FCC plans to make a relatively modest
incentive payment to Intelsat and other satellite companies that
use the spectrum, like SES SA. Speculation spread that the
companies would receive about $5 billion rather than a prorated
share of auction proceeds, prompting bondholders to bail out, the
analysts said.
"We've tried to establish for the record that the actual value
of the spectrum is between $43 billion and $77 billion," said
Dianne VanBeber, vice president for investor relations at Intelsat.
"We have a fiduciary duty to our stakeholders and can't surrender
the value of our rights for less than the market value."
A spokesman for the FCC declined to comment
U.S. government bond yields dropped Thursday after the U.S.
Commerce Department reported 2.1% growth in GDP in the fourth
quarter, the slowest rise since 2016, and as concerns mounted that
the coronavirus could spread globally. The yield of the 10-year
Treasury was around 1.551% compared with 1.593% Wednesday,
according to data from Tradeweb.
The WSJ Dollar Index, which measures the U.S. currency against a
basket of 16 others, slipped Thursday to 90.82 from 90.88 on
Wednesday.
Write to Matt Wirz at matthieu.wirz@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
January 30, 2020 13:30 ET (18:30 GMT)
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