("ConAgra Boosts Debt-Buyback Offer By $300M; Demand Strong,"
published at 9:46 a.m. EDT and updated at 12:33 and 2:11 p.m. EDT
incorrectly said ConAgra was cutting capital spending this year to
preserve cash. A corrected version of the 2nd update appears
below.)
DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
ConAgra Foods Inc. (CAG) boosted its debt-repurchase tender
offer by $300 million amid strong demand Monday from investors in
the wake of the consumer-foods company raising $1 billion to repay
other debt.
The sale itself was increased from $750 million two weeks
ago.
Holders tendered $290.6 million of so-called put notes as of
Friday's deadline to receive an extra payment; there are $300
million of the notes outstanding.
Meanwhile, $679.4 million of senior notes due in 2010 and 2011
were tendered as of Friday; ConAgra originally offered to buy up to
$300 million of them. Monday's announcement doubles that figure.
The company is offering the holders a premium above the notes' par
value.
"Our primary objective was to proactively address the
refinancing of debt scheduled to come due over the next two plus
years," spokesman Jeff Mochal said in a statement.
The company took the opportunity to issue new debt at favorable
rates, extend its debt maturities, lower the average coupon of its
outstanding debt and reduce future risks such as rising interest
rates and market volatility, he said.
"We believe that the cost of any premium we have to pay to
redeem outstanding debt is more than justified by the benefits,"
Mochal said.
Buying the put notes allows the company to remove a liability
and preempt any wave of puts, said William Larkin, portfolio
manager at Cabot Money Management, based in Salem, Mass. In
addition, the notes maturing in 2010 carry a coupon of 7.875%, but
its recently issued 10-year notes trade with a coupon in the 6%
range, Larkin said.
"The market is a little more freed up," he said.
S&P cut its credit rating on ConAgra earlier this month to
two steps above junk territory, saying the company's financial
condition isn't likely to improve much amid the economic
downturn.
Last month, the company reported a fiscal third-quarter profit
that exceeded analysts' projections, but packaged-food shipments
fell and the company lowered prices on some products in the face of
private-label competition.
More companies may be looking to buy back their debt. Debt
forgiven through buybacks is usually taxed as income, but stimulus
legislation allows companies that repurchase debt to delay those
taxes until 2014, and then to spread the tax out over a five-year
period.
-By Katherine E. Wegert, Dow Jones Newswires; 201-938-5294;
katherine.wegert@dowjones.com
(Romy Varghese and Michael Aneiro contributed to this
report.)