19 Apr 2024
Wednesday 29 May 2013 - 15:42
Story Code : 30459

Iran to Libya trade boom prompts port bond sale: Turkey credit

A Turkish port servingIraq,LibyaandIranis planning to sell bonds, taking advantage of record-lowinterest ratesto pay off debt and expand as the nations trade with the Middle East booms.
The Mersin port company applied to sell as much as $600 million in bonds, according to a statement to the Borsa Istanbul on May 27. The sale may lower the companys financing costs as the average yield on Turkish corporate debt fell 135 basis points over the past year to 4.24 percent on May 24, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co. indexes. That compares with an average 5.03 percent for emerging-market companies, the data show.

TurkeysAkfen Holding AS (AKFEN)and PSA International Pte. of Singapore own equal stakes in the port on Turkeys Mediterranean coast, the countrys largest after Istanbul and Izmir. While trade withEuropeslows, commerce with theMiddle Eastjumped 39 percent in 2012, data from the state statistics agency showed. Mersin is the most profitable and most indebted of Akfens business units, according to the holding company.

We want to improve the conditions on this debt, Akfen Chief Executive Officer Suha Gucsar said by telephone on May 27. We are investing in a new port on the seaside that will accept bigger vessels and well use some of those proceeds for investment.
Winning Bid
Akfen and PSA bid $755 million at a government auction in 2005 for the port, called Mersin Uluslararasi Liman Isletmeciligi AS. Mersin reported a 35 percent increase in revenue to 252.5 million liras ($136 million) last year, according to a presentation on its website. Its ratio of earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization to revenue was 60 percent, based on the report.

Mersin port is a very profitable organization, Isik Okte, chief strategist at Halk Invest, the investment unit for state-runTurkiye Halk Bankasi AS (HALKB), said by e-mail yesterday. Port operations are a very lucrative business in growth areas, and volume has picked up significantly in terms of trade there.

Genel Energy (GENL), a Turkish energy company listed inLondon, began trucking crude oil into the country from the Kurdistan region in northern Iraq this year, storing it at a facility in Mersin, Chief Executive OfficerTony Haywardsaid in January. Genel plans to complete a pipeline from the region to Turkey this year, Hayward said in April.
Oil Trade
Oil exports from the Kurdish region to Turkey may climb to 2 million barrels by 2019 from about 250,000 barrels this year, the regions oil ministerAshti Hawramisaid last month.

Mersin aims to be the port operator of choice in the east Mediterranean with rail and highway links to Syria, Iraq and Iran, according to a mission statement on the companys website.

Libya now is the top destination for exports from Mersin port, including anything from construction material to carpets and food as the country is being rebuilt, Ali Serdar Kocaoglu, general manager of OSF International Logistics Services Foreign Trade Co. in Mersin, said by telephone on May 28. It is so intense that ships often wait one or two days off the Libyan ports of Tripoli, Benghazi and Misrate to unload.

Mersin had 519 million liras of debt at the end of last year, according to the groups financial results for the 2012 fiscal year published on the companys website on April 4. Akfen also owns airport operatorTAV Havalimanlari Holding AS (TAVHL), ferries in Istanbul and property and construction companies, based on the report.

Akfensshareshave gained 20 percent this year in Istanbul, compared with a 15 percent increase for the benchmark Borsa ISE National 100 Index.
Debt Sales
Turkish companies have sold $24.3 billion in bonds this year, almost double the $12.7 billion in the same period last year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

The lira weakened 0.7 percent to 1.8587 per dollar at 6 p.m. in Istanbul yesterday. Theyieldon two-year lira-denominated sovereign debt rose three basis points to 5.26 percent, paring the drop in the past 12 months to 419 basis points, or 4.19 percentage points, the biggest decline among majoremerging marketstracked by Bloomberg.

The extrayieldinvestors demand to hold Turkish sovereign debt in dollars over U.S. Treasuries rose four basis points to 186, compared with 197 for higher-ratedBraziland 191 forRussia, according to JPMorgan indexes. Turkey is rated Baa3, the lowest investment grade, at Moodys Investors Service. Brazil is ranked one step higher and Russia two levels above Turkey.
Trading Partners
The European Unions share in Turkeys trade fell to 40.7 percent in March from 41.6 percent in the same month in 2012, according to the latest available data from the statistics agency. Exports toGermanydeclined to $1.15 billion, down 9.5 percent from the same a year earlier, the data show. While Germany was Turkeys top destination for trade, Iraq ranked second with $932 million in exports.

Turkeys trading partners are changing and geopolitics is key, Halk Invests Okte said. The EUs share is declining and the Middle East andAfricaare gaining. As Turkeys trading partners shift, the Mersin port will gain even more.

By Bloomberg

 

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