UPDATE 3-Orient-Express Q1 bleak; to issue stock, shares sink
* Says Madrid hotel breaches covenant
* Gets waiver on long-term debt facilities
* Sees Q1 rev $89.4 mln vs est $97.4 mln
* Expects loss of $14.6 mln for Q1
* Shares fall 23 pct (Adds analysts' comments, updates share movement)
By Amitha Rajan
BANGALORE, April 27 (Reuters) - As it strives to stay afloat, Orient-Express Hotels Ltd (OEH.N) is looking at options such as stock offerings and disposing assets in an effort to shore up cash.
Orient-Express Hotels on Monday forecast a 26 percent fall in first-quarter revenue per available room, and said one of its hotels breached a debt covenant and that it plans to offer about 15 million of its common stock.
Shares of the company plunged 23 percent to $6.83, before recouping some losses to trade down $1.88 at $6.99 Monday afternoon. The stock was the top percentage loser on the New York Stock Exchange.
The company, which had warned last month that it may breach a minimum $600 million tangible net worth covenant in two long-term debt facilities at the end of its first quarter, also said it obtained a waiver, under which it will need to pay about $9.7 million in June.
"We continue to be concerned about the company's liquidity situation and are concerned that asset sales in this environment could only come at trough multiples," analyst Steven Kent of Goldman Sachs said in a note to clients.
The operator of luxury hotels, restaurants, tourist trains and river cruise businesses said its hotel Ritz Madrid was out of compliance with a debt service coverage ratio in its first mortgage loan facility and is in talks with lenders.
Orient-Express, which planned to suspend quarterly dividend beginning this year, said it had total net debt of about $848.5 million and cash balances of $54.8 million as of March 31.
Standard & Poor's Equity Research downgraded the stock to "sell" from "hold" and trimmed its target price by $1 to $4.50, saying the company has limited options to reduce financial distress.
RAISING CAPITAL
Hotels are struggling as recession-hit consumers cut back on extras like travel at the same time businesses are looking to trim travel costs and avoid perceptions of frivolous spending. Continued...



