(Corrects sales comparisons in the 11th paragraph)
By Jonathan Schwarzberg and Andrew Berlin
NEW YORK, Nov 2(Reuters) - A US$750m leveraged loan for
publicly-traded US office supplies retailer Office Depot is
testing sentiment to the retail sector as online competition,
the threat of further technological disruption and rising
default rates make investors think twice about lending.
The threat from online retailer Amazon was highlighted on
Tuesday when an announcement about the ecommerce giant's
Business Prime Shipping service for users with Amazon Business
accounts hit rival Staples secondary loan and bond prices.
Staples' US$2.9bn loan, which backed the
business-to-business part of its August buyout by private equity
firm Sycamore Partners, fell to 96% of face value from 99% to
yield roughly 6.75%.
The company's US$1bn 8.5% bonds fell to 90 from around 95,
sending yields above 10%, creating a difficult backdrop for
Office Depot's loan.
"This is a sector that no one wants to touch," a debt
investor said. "Amazon's rapid evolution of technology has
really sped up the decline of retail. Defaults in retail are
typically a slow burn, but they may end up going a lot faster."
The US retail sector is currently topping the default list.
The bankruptcy filing of Toys R US in September boosted the
retail default rate to 7.3% and Fitch estimates that it could
hit 10% in 2018.
Goldman Sachs is leading Office Depot's deal, which finances
its roughly US$1bn purchase of information technology services
company CompuCom.
The deal is offering investors a spread of 500bp-525bp and
commitments are due on October 31. The average secondary spread
on B1-rated loans is currently 386bp, according to Thomson
Reuters LPC.
The loan offers investors a relatively high coupon for a
company that will generate a combined US$234m of unlevered free
cash flow (roughly 23% of debt) and has low leverage of 1.3x
Ebitda.
Bookbuilding has been slow and investors are already seeking
concessions, a prospective lender said.
The company's sales fell 9.6% from 2015 to the last 12
months ending in June 2017, according to regulatory filings.
Office Depot said that it expects sales in 2017 to be lower than
2016 due to store closures and challenging market
conditions. CompuCom's sales have declined 9.6% since 2015.
"It's hard to get excited about two declining businesses," a
second investor said.
After its failed merger with Staples in 2016, Office Depot
has been trying to streamline its business by shutting
underperforming stores and cutting procurement and overhead
costs.
Lenders are worried about Office Depot's restricted payments
capacity and its ability to incur additional debt, which as
currently proposed could allow leverage to rise above the level
at the acquisition's close. Incremental debt as currently
proposed would cap senior secured leverage at 1.5 times.
The combination of the companies will create only US$40m in
synergies, for a company with a combined US$790m in Ebitda which
leaves little room for error in operation, a third investor
said.
Office Depot has a liquidity cushion in the shape of a
US$1.2bn asset-based lending facility. The company also has
US$537m of cash on hand.
Goldman Sachs declined to comment. Office Depot did not
return a request for comment.
(Reporting by Jonathan Schwarzberg and Andrew Berlin; Editing
By Tessa Walsh and Michelle Sierra)
Keywords: OFFICEDEPOT LENDING/