|
Tuesday 29th September 2009 |
Text too small? |
Meridian Energy will enter the retail bond market for the first time in the first quarter of 2010, in its first offering of long term retail bonds.
The exact size of the Renewable Energy Bonds issue has yet to be determined.
The company is also planning to reopen its short term Renewable Energy Notes once the company's annual report has been tabled in Parliament, around mid-October, the company's chief executive, Tim Lusk, told a Meridian profit briefing today.
Rated BBB+ by Standard & Poors for long term debt and A2 for short term, Meridian is reviewing its capital management strategy following a strong improvement in its key credit rating metric, EBITDAF interest cover, which was well above target at 5.9 times.
Meridian is also making a special dividend capital return of $150 million on top of a $113.9 million ordinary dividend, as a result of this.
Meridian currently has $124 million of the renewable energy notes on issue, all with maturities of less than 18 months and paying between 5% and 5.25%, and wants to maintain funds at around that level.
The company has not previously issued retail bond instruments.
Businesswire.co.nz
No comments yet
MCY - Mercury launches retail Green Bond offer
Fonterra delivers another strong result for HY26
March 23th Morning Report
Devon Funds Morning Note - 18 March 2026
TRA - Turners updates earnings guidance
March 18th Morning Report
MCY - Mercury opens $220m geothermal expansion
PYS - PaySauce undertakes Minimum Holding buyback
March 17th Morning Report
Meridian Energy monthly operating report for February 2026