Fitch Downgrades Eastcomtrans to 'CCC'; Withdraws Ratings
KEY RATING DRIVERS
The downgrade reflects increased pressure on ECT's liquidity, as a result of which Fitch views the company's default as a real possibility.
ECT's bondholders 15 December 2016 did not accept a proposed change of terms (including extension of maturity) of the company's eurobond (outstanding USD59m, due April 2018). In Fitch's view, ECT will be dependent on refinancing (attracting new funding) in order to be able to repay the Eurobond and a further USD105m (including USD74m principal) of funding maturing in 2017-2018, as the current cash balance (USD25m) and internal cash generation (projected by management at USD91m for 2017-2018 combined) is likely to be insufficient. Potential funding acceleration as a result of covenant breaches could also increase near-term liquidity pressure and default risk.
ECT's financial profile deteriorated sharply in 2015 as a result of losses driven by the company's short FX position, which consumed 59% of its capital. Stabilisation of the exchange rate and performance in 2016, combined with moderate deleveraging, have enabled the debt/tangible equity ratio to recover to a reasonable 3.7x at end-9M16 (end-2015: 5.5x; end-2014: 1.4x). However, higher than historical leverage means that the company now has limited unpledged assets which it could use to secure the additional funding it needs to support its liquidity.
RATING SENSITIVITIES
Not applicable.
The rating actions are as follows:
Long-Term IDR downgraded to 'CCC' from 'B'; withdrawn
Short-Term IDR downgraded to 'C' from 'B'; withdrawn
Long-Term local currency IDR downgraded to 'CCC' from 'B'; withdrawn
National Long-Term Rating downgraded to 'B-(kaz)' from 'BB(kaz)'; withdrawn
Senior secured rating downgraded to 'CCC' from 'B', Recovery Rating 'RR4'; withdrawn
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