Wednesday, December 17, 2008

"But even if it manages to avoid that fate, it needs to refinance the debt in 2010"

Floyd Norris in the NY Times makes a point that is similar to Robert Peston's about Bonds coming due and needing to be refinanced in the near future:


"Gods and the Credit Crunch

Inn of the Mountain Gods slashed to CCC on liquidity concerns

That is the headline on a report Tuesday from Standard & Poor’s Leveraged Commentary and Data. It caught my eye. Have the rating agencies moved from C.D.O.’s to deities?

Of course not. But the report was worth reading. It refers to the Inn of the Mountain Gods Casino and Resort, one of the many casinos that have arisen in New Mexico on sites with the virtues of being near highways and, I assume, on Indian reservations, but with the problem of not being close to many gamblers. When I visited the state in March, I was stunned by how many casinos there were at highway off-ramps where there was nothing else for miles around. There were not many cars in some of the parking lots.

S.& P. cut the debt rating from B, a low junk rating, to CCC, an even lower one that indicates a significant risk of default.

Here’s part of the report:

“Challenging economic factors — low consumer confidence, housing-market turmoil and high energy prices — have made for a tough slog this year at the casino resort, and the company’s ski operations experienced weak results last winter. High fuel costs were a particular concern this year, given the distance from feeder markets, which are El Paso (roughly 130 miles) and Albuquerque (nearly 190 miles).”

This is a 2003 deal, which the report says was syndicated by Citi. In 2003, credit markets were generous, but not nearly as generous as they would be by 2005 and 2006.

The raters at S.&P. (who are separate from the Leveraged Commentary folks) think that the company may be hard-pressed to meet its interest payments over the next six months, and point out it has to do that from operations since it has no credit line with any banks.

The ratings cut evidently is not a shocker to those who trade such paper: “The company’s 12 percent notes due 2010 haven’t changed hands since the news, but were last seen trading in a 40 context, down from the low 80s this past summer and nearly 110 before the credit crisis, sources said.” Those figures are percentages of par value.

It will take a significant deterioration in business for Inn of the Mountain Gods not to be able to meet the interest payments. But even if it manages to avoid that fate, it needs to refinance the debt in 2010, and it is obvious that some people see a low probability of it being able to raise the money. ( THIS WAS PESTON'S POINT )

There may be a lot of low-rated companies in the next couple of years facing a similar problem. Having borrowed when credit was easy, they must repay the loans when credit is very tight. A rising number of bankruptcies will be caused by the fact lenders were generous, and now are not. The credit contraction helped to bring on the recession. The recession may make the contraction worse. And so on and so on."

This is why I believe that we need targeted tax cuts for businesses, in case lending is still frozen.

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