Element Financial Corporation has announced (emphasis added):
Element also announced that it plans to sell, on a bought deal basis, pursuant to a supplement to the Base Shelf Prospectus, an aggregate of 3.0 million Cumulative 5-year Rate Reset Preferred Shares, Series A of Element (“Series A Preferred Shares”) at a price of $25.00 per Series A Preferred Share for gross proceeds of approximately $75 million (the “Preferred Share Offering”, and together with the Common Share Offering, the “Offerings”) to a syndicate of underwriters co-led by GMP Securities L.P, National Bank Financial Inc., CIBC World Markets, RBC Capital Markets, BMO Nesbitt Burns Inc. and TD Securities Inc. and including Manulife Securities Inc. and Hampton Securities Limited (collectively, the “Preferred Share Underwriters”, and together with the Common Share Underwriters, the “Underwriters”).
Holders of the Series A Preferred Shares will be entitled, as and when declared by the Board of Directors of the Company, to receive a cumulative quarterly fixed dividend for the initial five-year period ending December 31, 2018 of 6.60% per annum. Thereafter, the dividend rate will reset every five years to an annual dividend rate equal to the 5-Year Government of Canada Bond Yield as quoted on Bloomberg on the 30th day prior to the first day of the relevant subsequent five year fixed rate period plus 4.71%.
Holders of the Series A Preferred Shares will have the right to convert their shares into Cumulative Floating Rate Preferred Shares, Series B of the Company (the “Floating Rate Series B Preferred Shares”), subject to certain conditions and the Company’s right to redeem the Series A Preferred Shares, on December 31, 2018 and on December 31 every five years thereafter. Holders of the Floating Rate Series B Preferred Shares will be entitled to receive a quarterly floating rate dividend, as and when declared by the Board of Directors of the Company, equal to the then current three-month Government of Canada Treasury Bill yield plus 4.71%. Holders of the Floating Rate Series B Preferred Shares may convert their Floating Rate Series B Preferred Shares into Series A Preferred Shares, subject to certain conditions and the Company’s right to redeem the Floating Rate Series B Preferred Shares, on December 31, 2023 and on December 31 every five years thereafter. The Series A Preferred Shares will not be rated.
The Company has granted to each of the Common Share Underwriters and the Preferred Share Underwriters an option (collectively, the “Over-Allotment Options”), which may be exercised at any time for a period of 30 days following the closing of the Offerings, to purchase at the issue price under the Offerings an additional 3,545,550 Common Shares for additional gross proceeds of up to approximately $48.8 million and an additional 450,000 Series A Preferred Shares for additional gross proceeds of up to $11.25 million. In the event that the Over-Allotment Options are exercised in their entirety, the aggregate gross proceeds of the Offerings will be approximately $460 million.
The proceeds of the Offerings, including any proceeds from the exercise of the Over-Allotment Options, will be used to originate and finance, directly or indirectly, finance assets as well as for general corporate purposes. The Offerings are expected to close on December 17, 2013 and are subject to certain conditions including, but not limited to, the receipt of all necessary regulatory approvals including the approval of the Toronto Stock Exchange.
This issue will not be tracked by HIMIPref™ due to the lack of a credit rating. As I explain every time this comes up, this is not because I worship the Credit Rating Agencies, but because a downgrade (or simply a threat of one) from a major agency can help to focus the minds of management and directors.
Update, 2013-12-10: Globe & Mail story titled Investors like Element Financial’s ‘boring’ business.
Update, 2014-2-26: Trades as EFN.PR.A
So if an issue isn’t tracked by your himipref(tm) would you still engage in a trade in it if you saw value for your malachite fund – or do you stick to high quality only?
it would seem that the efn are trading much lower then aim – one is a bank one isn’t but is aim that much stronger then efn or do you observe that there can be wide variance in low ratings (no ratings even) prefs when compared to each other?
reikreik
So if an issue isn’t tracked by your himipref(tm) would you still engage in a trade in it if you saw value for your malachite fund
No.
one is a bank one isn’t but is aim that much stronger then efn
I’ve never properly examined the question, but I believe that low-quality financials are deprecated in the marketplace – people will generally put up with lower quality issues only to get away from the financials which dominate investment-grade.