BOEING launched a nearly US$19 billion share sale, one of the largest ever by a public company, to address the troubled planemaker’s liquidity needs and stave off a potential credit rating downgrade to junk.
The company offered to sell 90 million common shares and about US$5 billion of depositary shares, according to a statement on Monday (Oct 28), confirming an earlier Bloomberg News report.
The common-share portion alone would total just under US$14 billion, based on Friday’s closing price of US$155.01. That would be the largest US share sale since SoftBank Group sold part of its stake in T-Mobile US in 2020, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
Boeing’s shares closed down 2.8 per cent at US$150.69 each on Monday in New York. The stock has declined roughly 42 per cent this year, the second worst performance in the Dow Jones Industrial Average.
With overallotments, the fundraising total could rise to about US$21.8 billion, based on Bloomberg calculations.
The infusion of funds would clear one of new chief executive officer Kelly Ortberg’s most urgent tasks. He is grappling with a balance sheet strained by years of turmoil and the fallout from a strike, now in its seventh week, that is crippling manufacturing of the company’s main cash cow, the 737 Max jetliner. Boeing needs the capital infusion to maintain its investment-grade rating and fund its production ramp-up once the walkout ends.
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The company is on pace to use around US$4 billion in cash during the fourth quarter, which would bring its free cash outflow to around US$14 billion for the year. The planemaker expects to continue burning cash to the first half of next year as it restarts its airplane factories, including the assembly lines for its cash-cow 737 Max jetliner.
Boeing factory workers voted last week to reject the company’s latest contract offer, which included a wage increase of 35 per cent spread over four years. The company plans to cut its workforce by about 10 per cent, Ortberg said in a memo to employees Oct 11.
The company on Oct 23 received clearance from the US Securities and Exchange Commission to sell as much as US$25 billion of equity and debt. Boeing also has a separate new credit agreement in place for US$10 billion, giving it “additional short-term access to liquidity as we navigate through a challenging environment”.
Ortberg is also considering options to streamline Boeing’s broad portfolio. He has launched a review of its businesses that the CEO expects to conclude by year-end. The company is weighing options for the future of its troubled Starliner space capsule programme as part of the review, Bloomberg News has reported.
As part of the offering, the depositary shares will represent a 1/20th interest in newly issued mandatory convertible preferred stock that will convert in October 2027, or earlier, based on a pre-determined formula, according to the statement.
The three-year convertibles are being marketed with a dividend of 6 to 6.5 per cent, and a 17.5 to 22.5 per cent conversion premium, according to terms seen by Bloomberg News. The deal is expected to price on Monday after the market closes, the terms show.
The underwriters have the option for an added 13.5 million common shares and US$750 million in depositary shares to cover over-allotments, the statement shows.
PJT Partners is acting as Boeing’s financial adviser for the offerings, according to the statement.
Goldman Sachs, BofA Securities, Citigroup and JP Morgan are acting as the lead joint bookrunning managers, while Wells Fargo Securities, BNP Paribas, Deutsche Bank Securities, Mizuho, Morgan Stanley, RBC Capital Markets and SMBC Nikko are acting as joint bookrunning managers. BLOOMBERG