McDonnell Douglas Debt Rating Reduced
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Standard & Poor’s Corp. lowered the ratings Tuesday on McDonnell Douglas debt, the third such reduction since last year, citing cost pressures on military programs and the recent cancellation of the $57-billion Navy A-12 attack jet program.
The St. Louis-based aerospace firm’s senior debt was reduced to a BBB rating--the lowest rating still considered “investment grade.” Many institutional investors have bylaws requiring that they hold only investment grade securities.
The downgrading affects all of McDonnell’s $5.6 billion in debt, including that issued by the firm’s financial services unit. The aerospace side of the firm holds $2.06 billion in long-term debt and $909 million in short-term debt, primarily in the form of bank loans.
In issuing the downgrade, S&P; cited the $1.3-billion reimbursement that the Navy has demanded from McDonnell and its partner General Dynamics as a result of the A-12 termination.
McDonnell has said it expects that an appeal will result in the cancellation being relabeled a “convenience of the government” termination, in which case the $1.3-billion demand would vanish.
A company spokesman said the firm was “disappointed” by the downgrading.
Securities analyst Howard Rubel of C. J. Lawrence, Morgan Grenfell said he considered the downgrading a “non-event” because the bond market has already effectively downgraded McDonnell bonds to a yield similar to that of a non-investment grade security.
While a standard BBB bond pays about 10% annually in its yield to maturity, the McDonnell bonds are yielding 14%, Rubel said. “S&P; is making this downgrading looking through a rearview mirror,” Rubel said.
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