Free Subscription

  • Access daily briefings and unlimited news articles

Premium

Only $39.95 per year
  • Quarterly magazine and digital
  • Indepth executive interviews
  • Unlimited news and insights
  • Expert opinion and analysis

Sharp in “selective default”

rsz_sharpTroubled Japanese electronics maker, Sharp, is in “selective default”, ratings agency S&P said, the latest blow to the one time giant as it struggles to repair a tattered balance sheet.

The move comes after Sharp announced it would issue preferred securities to its main lenders, instead of repaying loans that were due.

“We regard this transaction as a de facto debt for equity swap, which we define as ‘SD’ (selective default). Therefore, we lowered our issuer credit rating on Sharp to ‘SD’,” the agency said in a release.

“We also revised the CreditWatch implications on our ratings on Sharp’s long term debt and commercial paper (CP) program to positive from negative.”

However, S&P said, the classification was expected to be only temporary.

“Once a debt for equity swap that we define as a default is completed, we review the company’s post swap credit profile and raise the issuer credit rating from ‘SD’ as swiftly as possible, in accordance with our criteria.

“Therefore, we expect to assess Sharp’s credit quality and upgrade the company from ‘SD’ as early as tomorrow.”

The once mighty Sharp, like rivals Sony and Panasonic, has been working to move past years of gaping deficits, partly caused by steep losses in its television unit, which has been hammered by competition from lower cost rivals particularly in South Korea and Taiwan.

In May, it announced it was cutting 10 per cent of its 49,000 strong global workforce as part of a turnaround plan intended to keep it afloat after posting a bigger than expected $US1.86 billion ($A2.41 billion) annual loss.

The embattled Aquos brand maker said it would sell the building that houses its Osaka headquarters to raise cash, roll out unspecified pay cuts, and launch a drastic capital reduction plan to wipe away huge losses.

Sharp, a major Apple supplier and leader in screens for smartphones and tablets, said at the time it would issue Y200 billion ($A2.12 billion) worth of new shares with no voting rights to Mizuho Bank and Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UF.

S&P’s action is in response to that move.

AFP

You have 3 free articles.