Skip to main content

Cemex wins over 90% acceptance for debt exchange offer

Cemex, the largest cement maker in the Americas, has won more than 90% acceptance of an offer to extend maturities on US$ 7.25 billion of loans by three years. Support for the proposal, whose acceptance deadline was extended to 7th September, is said to have bolstered Cemex’s efforts to prevent a financing crunch in 2014 by pushing maturities to 2017.
August 22, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
3016 Cemex, the largest cement maker in the Americas, has won more than 90% acceptance of an offer to extend maturities on US$ 7.25 billion of loans by three years.

Support for the proposal, whose acceptance deadline was extended to 7th September, is said to have bolstered Cemex’s efforts to prevent a financing crunch in 2014 by pushing maturities to 2017. The company has posted 11 straight quarterly losses after the U.S housing slump and global economic slowdown hurt demand for building materials.

Originally planning to close the transaction if it won backing from holders of 95% of the debt, the Monterrey, Mexico-based company said the terms will be modified to allow completion with 91% acceptance if the higher target isn’t met by 7th September. In addition to the 90% who agreed to the offer already, Cemex said another 1.5% have already indicated they plan to do so.

Based on current acceptance notices from creditors wanting new high-yield notes that are part of the offer, Cemex said it anticipated issuing a principal amount of $470 million. The company said in June that it would issue as much as $500 million of the notes.

Meanwhile, Cemex has announced that Cemex Latam Holdings, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Cemex Espana, has applied to the Superintendencia Financiera de Colombia to list its shares on the Colombian stock exchange. A minority of Cemex Latam's shares will be made available through a public offering to investors in Colombia and, in a concurrent private placement, to eligible investors outside of Colombia. Cemex Latam's assets are expected to include substantially all of Cemex's assets in Central and South America, which does not include Mexico.

In a written statement, a Cemex spokesperson said: “This application is one component of the previously announced asset sale alternatives Cemex is pursuing in connection with its ongoing initiative to reduce debt and extend its debt maturities.

Cemex continues to pursue its previously announced asset sale alternatives, and ultimate implementation of any of such alternatives (which include the potential sales of: (i) a minority stake in operations in select countries; (ii) selected U.S. assets; (iii) selected European assets; and/or (iv) other non-core assets) remains at the discretion of Cemex.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Road link upgrade in Costa Rica
    January 5, 2017
    A key road in Costa Rica has been upgraded and now features concrete construction CEMEX Latam Holdings, a subsidiary of CEMEX, supplied the cement needed for the project to upgrade a 50km stretch of the Inter-American Highway in Costa Rica.
  • Major highway improvement project on track in Colombia
    February 29, 2016
    In Colombia plans are now in hand for a major highway improvement project. Concesión Pacífico Tres is joint concession operator of the tolled links for Colombia’s major commercial regions connecting with the Pacific port hub. US firm Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy has provided advice to Colombian Concessionaire Concesión Pacífico Tres SAS and its sponsors, MHC Ingeniería y Construcción de Obras Civiles and Construcciones El Cóndor, and Costa Rica’s infrastructure company Constructora MECO. The advice was
  • Cemex's Philippines projects
    July 1, 2013
    Cemex in the Philippines is providing cement for the Millennium Road Project. This is part of a US$214million infrastructure package that will connect 15 municipalities in Samar, a province located in the country’s Eastern Visayas region. Phase one is expected to reach completion by November 2013. Cemex’s APO cement plant, which is situated strategically in the Visayas, will supply the required materials via its jetty port, considered the most modern facility of its type in the country to date. The project
  • Green light for Cemex sustainability
    May 4, 2012
    Cemex has revealed significant progress in key indicators related to sustainable construction. “We are proud to have reached an alternative fuels substitution rate of close to 25% in our cement operations in 2011, on track to achieve a rate of 35% by 2015,” said Lorenzo Zambrano, chief executive of Cemex. In 2011, Cemex’s rate of alternative-fuel use rose to 24.7% of total fuel mix, a sizable improvement from its rate of 20.3% in 2010. In addition, the company achieved a 22.7% reduction on CO2 net emissions