Korean firms halt bond, share issues despite tighter liquidity

Some foreign funds are preparing to flee the domestic bond market, says one brokerage firm's debt capital market head

(Courtesy of Getty Images)
(Courtesy of Getty Images)
Hyeong-Gyo Suh, Ik-hwan Kim and Seok-Cheol Choi 2
2024-12-11 14:35:06 seogyo@hankyung.com
Capital raising

South Korean companies are postponing bond issues and initial public offerings on chilled investor sentiment in the aftermath of President Yoon Suk Yeol’s failed martial law attempt last week.

In desperate efforts to raise money, they offered much higher interest rates and suggested lower valuations. But even so, they failed to whet investor appetite, derailing their plans to secure more cash to brace for an economic downturn.

For most of this year, the domestic bond market enjoyed abundant liquidity as investors sought to lock in high yields before the arrival of widely expected interest rate cuts next year.

But the tide turned with Yoon’s martial law imposition on the night of Dec. 3. While repealed by Parliament a few hours later, it has raised political uncertainty about Asia’s No. 4 economy.

(Graphics by Dongbeom Yun)
(Graphics by Dongbeom Yun)


From Dec. 4-9, South Korean companies redeemed a net 241.2 billion won ($168 million) in bonds, according to the Korea Financial Investment Association. That means more debt repayment than new issues.

The figure compared with their debt sales of net 3.1 trillion won in the entire month of October and net 3.6 trillion won in November.

A large domestic construction company is said to have sold a three-month paper at an annualized yield of 7% early this week. That is even higher than the mid-4% yield at which it issued a three-month note in late October.

(Graphics by Dongbeom Yun)
(Graphics by Dongbeom Yun)


ABL Life Insurance Co. recently scrapped a plan to raise 100 billion won in 10-year subordinated debt rated single A.

Hyosung Chemical Corp. also withdrew a 30-billion-won bond sale at an annualized yield of 7.7%. The one-year bond was rated triple A.

No investors subscribed for the issues during bookbuilding, said industry officials.

“Until last month, there was a strong demand for high-interest-rate, non-investment grade corporate bonds. But the atmosphere has reversed,” said Kim Myung-sil, a researcher at iM Securities.

“Investors are shifting to treasuries and blue-chip corporate bonds in search of safe-haven assets,” he added.

Some institutional investors are said to be steering clear of bonds issued by chemical, petrochemical chemical and construction companies, which are suffering a prolonged industry slump. Also, some foreign funds are preparing to flee the domestic bond market, said a debt capital market head at a local brokerage firm.

(Graphics by Dongbeom Yun)
(Graphics by Dongbeom Yun)


Amid the country’s political leadership vacuum, five Korean companies, including machine tool maker DN Solutions Co., have recently postponed their stock market listings to next year.

Still, it remains uncertain when they will revisit their IPO plans with the benchmark stock index hovering around its lowest point in more than 11 months.

On Monday, the benchmark Kospi index broke below the 2,400 level for the first time since Jan. 20, 2023

Write to Hyeong-Gyo Suh, Ik-hwan Kim and Seok-Cheol Choi at seogyo@hankyung.com
 


Yeonhee Kim edited this article.

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