US CREDIT-Entergy credit default swaps may widen on spinoff
By Karen Brettell
NEW YORK, May 16 (Reuters) - Credit default swaps on Entergy Corp (ETR.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) may widen significantly if the energy company completes plans to spin off some of its assets into a new company.
Entergy said late last year it plans to transfer six nuclear power plants into a new publicly traded company, Enexus Energy Corp, hoping to capitalize on the plants' low operating costs and carbon-free emissions.
The company said in a regulatory filing this week it plans to transfer $3 billion in debt to the new company.
Under rules of the credit default swaps, this means that the contracts will likely be transferred from Entergy from Enexus, a process known as succession. And the new company is expected to have a much weaker credit profile than Entergy, analysts said.
"It looks pretty certain now that there will be a succession event, but even that is not a lock at the moment," CreditSights analysts said in a report.
"It also looks more possible that credit default swap holders could actually end up 100 percent at a small, below investment-grade merchant nuclear company with negative equity, clearly not a thrilling prospect," they said.
Credit default swaps on Entergy are trading at around 220 basis points, or $220,000 per year for five years to insure $10 million in debt, according to broker Phoenix Partners Group.
The price indicates the market is pricing in a range of uncertainties, including whether the spin off will be completed, or if its time frame will extend beyond the planned third quarter of 2008, JPMorgan analysts said in a report.
It also indicates that changes may be made to the amount of debt planned for the debt exchange between the two companies, they said.
If the deal is completed and the credit default swaps are transferred to Enexus they are likely to trade wider than 300 basis points, analysts said.
SUCCESSION
The amount of debt that is ultimately transferred to Enexus is critical because of rules governing debt exchanges in the securities.
If more than 75 percent of the debt underlying the credit default swaps is transferred to a new company, the credit default swap succeeds entirely to that company.
If between 25 percent and 75 percent of debt underlying the swaps is transferred to a new entity, the contracts are split evenly between the two businesses.
At current levels, the swaps indicate an even split.
With no certainty on how much debt will ultimately transferred, and no expectation that this issue will become clarified until the spinoff is near completion, Entergy's swaps remain risky, analysts said.
"We remain on the dock of the bay, without any enthusiasm for owning bonds or credit default swaps at any level in the capital structure," CreditSights said.
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