Archive for the ‘US Pay’ Category

ENB.PF.U Closes a Little Soft on Good Volume

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2012

Enbridge Inc. has announced:

it has closed its previously announced public offering of Cumulative Redeemable Preference shares, Series L (the “Series L Preferred Shares”) by a syndicate of underwriters led by Scotiabank, RBC Capital Markets, & TD Securities Inc. Enbridge issued 16 million Series L Preferred Shares for gross proceeds of US$400 million. The Series L Preferred Shares will begin trading on the TSX today under the symbol ENB.PF.U. The proceeds will be used for capital expenditures, to repay indebtedness and for other general corporate purposes.

ENB.PF.U is a FixedReset, US Pay, 4.00%+315, announced May 11. The issue traded 761,310 shares in a range of 24.80-95 before closing at 24.87-90, 20×15.

The issue will not be tracked by HIMIPref™; regrettably, there are not enough US-Pay issues available to form an analyzable universe.

New Issue: ENB FixedReset 4.00%+315 US PAY

Friday, May 11th, 2012

Enbridge Inc. has announced:

that it has entered into an agreement with a group of underwriters to sell eight million cumulative redeemable preference shares, series L (the “Series L Preferred Shares”) at a price of US$25.00 per share for distribution to the public. Closing of the offering is expected on May 23, 2012.

The holders of Series L Preferred Shares will be entitled to receive fixed cumulative dividends at an annual rate of US$1.00 per share, payable quarterly on the 1st day of March, June, September and December, as and when declared by the Board of Directors of Enbridge, yielding 4.00 per cent per annum, for the initial fixed rate period to but excluding September 1, 2017. The first quarterly dividend payment date is scheduled for September 1, 2012. The dividend rate will reset on September 1, 2017 and every five years thereafter at a rate equal to the sum of the then five-year United States Government bond yield plus 3.15 per cent. The Series L Preferred Shares are redeemable by Enbridge, at its option, on September 1, 2017 and on September 1 of every fifth year thereafter.

The holders of Series L Preferred Shares will have the right to convert their shares into cumulative redeemable preference shares, series M (the “Series M Preferred Shares”), subject to certain conditions, on September 1, 2017 and on September 1 of every fifth year thereafter. The holders of Series M Preferred Shares will be entitled to receive quarterly floating rate cumulative dividends, as and when declared by the Board of Directors of Enbridge, at a rate equal to the sum of the then 3-month US Treasury Bill rate plus 3.15 per cent.

Enbridge has granted to the underwriters an option, exercisable at any time up to 48 hours prior to the closing of the offering, to purchase up to an additional 2 million Series L Preferred Shares at a price of US$25.00 per share.

The offering is being made only in Canada by means of a prospectus. Proceeds will be used to partially fund capital projects, to reduce existing indebtedness and for other general corporate purposes of the Corporation and its affiliates.

The syndicate of underwriters is led by Scotiabank, RBC Capital Markets, and TD Securities Inc.

Update: Issue size doubled to 16-million shares

Update, 2013-9-19: Ticker is ENB.PF.U

ENB.PR.U Closes at Significant Premium on Heavy Volume

Thursday, April 19th, 2012

Enbridge Inc. has announced:

it has closed its previously announced public offering of cumulative redeemable preferred shares, Series J (the “Series J Preferred Shares”) by a syndicate of underwriters led by Scotiabank. Enbridge issued 8 million Series J Preferred Shares for gross proceeds of US$200 million. The Series J Preferred Shares will begin trading on the TSX today under the symbol ENB.PR.U. The proceeds will be used for capital expenditures, to repay indebtedness and for other general corporate purposes.

ENB.PR.U is a FixedReset, 4.00%+305, US-Pay, announced April 10.

The issue traded 1,054,194 shares today in a range of 25.35-50 before closing at 25.35-40, 53×244.

ENB.PR.U will not be tracked by HIMIPref™ as it is US-Pay and there are not enough US-Pay issues to form an analytical universe.

New Issue: ENB FixedReset 4.00%+305 US PAY

Tuesday, April 10th, 2012

Enbridge Inc. has announced:

that it has entered into an agreement with a group of underwriters to sell 8 million cumulative redeemable preference shares, series J (the “Series J Preferred Shares”) at a price of US$25.00 per share for distribution to the public. Closing of the offering is expected on April 19, 2012.

The holders of Series J Preferred Shares will be entitled to receive fixed cumulative dividends at an annual rate of US$1.00 per share, payable quarterly on the 1st day of March, June, September and December, as and when declared by the Board of Directors of Enbridge, yielding 4.00 per cent per annum, for the initial fixed rate period to but excluding June 1, 2017. The first quarterly dividend payment date is scheduled for September 1, 2012. The dividend rate will reset on June 1, 2017 and every five years thereafter at a rate equal to the sum of the then five-year United States Government bond yield plus 3.05 per cent. The Series J Preferred Shares are redeemable by Enbridge, at its option, on June 1, 2017 and on June 1 of every fifth year thereafter.

The holders of Series J Preferred Shares will have the right to convert their shares into cumulative redeemable preference shares, series K (the “Series K Preferred Shares”), subject to certain conditions, on June 1, 2017 and on June 1 of every fifth year thereafter. The holders of Series K Preferred Shares will be entitled to receive quarterly floating rate cumulative dividends, as and when declared by the Board of Directors of Enbridge, at a rate equal to the sum of the then 3-month US Treasury Bill rate plus 3.05 per cent.

The offering is being made only in Canada by means of a prospectus. Proceeds will be used to partially fund capital projects, to reduce existing indebtedness and for other general corporate purposes of the Corporation and its affiliates.

The syndicate of underwriters is led by Scotiabank.

As this issue is USD denominated, it will not be tracked by HIMIPref™.

Update, 2013-9-19: The symbol is ENB.PR.U

NXY.PR.U Particulars

Friday, April 2nd, 2010

With an eMail headed NXY.PR.U, I was asked:

Can you please comment on how to classify the subject preferred shares ? How would you rate the credit risk ?

NXY.PR.U is more formally referred to as Nexen 7.35% Subordinated Notes due 2043, which were issued pursant to a Prospectus Supplement dated October 28, 2003, which is available on SEDAR.

The prospectus states:

Our unsecured subordinated debentures due November 1, 2043 (the ‘‘Subordinated Notes’’) will bear interest, payable in U.S. dollars, at an annual rate of 7.35%, accruing from November 4, 2003 and payable quarterly in arrears on February 1, May 1, August 1 and November 1 of each year, commencing February 1, 2004.

The Subordinated Notes will be subordinated to all our present and future senior indebtedness and will be effectively subordinated to all liabilities of our subsidiaries, including partnerships.

This deep subordination means that the only thing they are senior to is equity – which will include preferred equity if Nexen ever issues some. However, they are on the right side of the bond/equity line, which means there are events of default. These events of default are specified on page 32 of the Shelf Prospectus, dated October 22, 2003, and are not over-ridden (as they might be) by the Prospectus Supplement for this particular series. This means that in the event of a missed interest payment, the holders of NXY.PR.U may declare the principal immediately due and payable, effectively placing the company in bankruptcy. This is significantly more protection than is available with preferred shares, although in practice holders of the sub-debt might wish to keep the company out of bankruptcy since they’ll be totally out-gunned and subordinated to the Senior Debt Holders in bankruptcy court.

However, if matters were to become sufficiently dire that the company could not meet its obligation to pay interest, they have the option to forestall such a move by redeeming the issue for common shares. This issue is currently redeemable at par:

We may redeem the Subordinated Notes, in whole or in part, at any time and from time to time on or after November 4, 2008 at a redemption price equal to 100% of the principal amount of the Subordinated Notes to be redeemed plus any accrued and unpaid interest to the date of such redemption.

We may satisfy our obligation to pay the applicable redemption price (excluding any accrued and unpaid interest) or principal amount of the Subordinated Notes by delivering to the Trustee (as defined herein) Common Shares (as defined herein), in which event the holders of the Subordinated Notes shall be entitled to receive cash payments equal to the applicable redemption price (excluding any accrued and unpaid interest) or principal amount from the proceeds of the sale of the requisite Common Shares by the Trustee.

The noteholders will not actually get the shares; they will be sold by the Trustee and the proceeds deposited in trust (see “Common Shares Payment Election” in the Prospectus Supplement). Another wrinkle is that there is no set number of Common Shares that must be delivered:

Notwithstanding the foregoing, we will not be permitted to satisfy our obligations to pay the redemption price (excluding any accrued and unpaid interest) or principal amount of the Subordinated Notes through the delivery of Common Shares if, on the Common Shares Delivery Date, the Common Shares are not then listed on a significant stock exchange in Canada or the United States. Neither our making of the Common Shares Payment Election nor the consummation of sales of Common Shares on the Common Shares Delivery Date will:

) result in the holders of the Subordinated Notes not being entitled to receive cash in an aggregate amount equal to the redemption price or principal amount of the Subordinated Notes plus, in each case, accrued and unpaid interest and other amounts, if any, thereon on the Maturity Date; or

) entitle or oblige such holders to receive any Common Shares in satisfaction of our obligation to pay the redemption price or principal amount of the Subordinated Notes.

So the Common Share Payment Election is a death-spiral conversion. I suspect the company would, 99 times in a hundred, prefer to go bankrupt.

The income distributions (7.35%, remember) are payable quarterly and are taxed as interest.

As far as credit quality is concerned … well, there’s a limit to what I’m going to do for free! DBRS rates them BBB(low), which maps to about maybe Pfd-2(low) / Pfd-3(high), somewhere around there.

There was something of a craze for issues of this nature back in the old days, when men were men.

Preferred Securities
CAD denominated
Ticker Issue Date Redemption Date
AEC.PR.A / ECA.PR.A 1999-8-9 2004-8-10
BNN.PR.S / BAM.PR.S 2001-12-20 2007-1-2
BNN.PR.T / BAM.PR.T 2002-4-22 2007-7-3
ENB.PR.B 1999-7-8 2004-12-16
ENB.PR.C 1999-10-21 2004-12-16
ENB.PR.D 2002-2-15 2007-2-15
MG.PR.A 1999-9-21 2004-10-1
SU.PR.A 1999-3-15 2004-3-15
TA.PR.A 1999-4-13 2005-2-16
TA.PR.B 1999-12-22 2005-2-16
TA.PR.C 2001-11-30 2007-1-2

Given the preponderance of of utilities in the above list, I suspect that this was a mechanism whereby the companies could gain the advantages of preferred shares (better credit ratios on their senior debt) without running afoul of contemporary regulatory restrictions on the issue of preferreds. But I have no definitive information on that point.

It was a nice market, hopelessly inefficient. Then, unfortunately, they continued to trade at enormous premia even as the first redemption date approached, yields declined to derisory (and even negative) levels and when they were called poor old retail got left holding the bag. I discussed the asset class in an article titled Interest Bearing Preferreds.

NXY.PR.U has not been previously discussed on PrefBlog. It is not tracked by HIMIPref™ since it is USD denominated.

FSV.PR.U Put on Credit Review – Developing by DBRS

Tuesday, April 15th, 2008

This is a USD denominated cumulative perpetual (see SEDAR, company search “FirstService”, Document type “Security holders documents – English”, dated June 27, 2007) issued as a stock dividend in June, 2007.

Following their announcement of the sale of their security division, DBRS has announced it:

has today placed the Pfd-3 (low) rating of FirstService Corporation’s (FSC or the Company) Preferred Share issue Under Review with Developing Implications.

The action follows FSC’s statement that it intends to use the proceeds from the recently announced divestiture of its integrated security division, together with existing funds and available capital, to finance organic growth and acquisitions in its commercial real estate, residential property management, and property improvement services divisions.

DBRS will also focus on FSC’s financial intentions, as we seek to gain comfort that credit metrics will remain appropriate for the current rating category within the context of the growth strategy and changing business profile. Prior to the divestiture, the Company’s debt balance was $331 million ($550 million lease-adjusted) at December 31, 2007 versus $230 million ($430 million lease-adjusted) at March 31, 2007, as a result of strong acquisition activity in its real estate services areas (total of $132 million in the first nine months of F2008). This has led debt-to-EBITDA for LTM ending December 31, 2007 to increase to 2.4 times (x) from 2.0x in F2007. (Corresponding lease-adjusted debt-to-EBITDAR has increased to 3.2x from 2.9x.)

FSV.PR.U is not tracked by HIMIPref™