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    Ukraine's Naftogaz sweetens debt restructuring offer

Summary

Ukrainian state energy firm Naftogaz sweetened a debt-restructuring offer to its bondholders on Friday in a bid to break a months-long deadlock in efforts to bring the company out of default.

by: Reuters

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Ukraine's Naftogaz sweetens debt restructuring offer

LONDON, March 10 (Reuters) - Ukrainian state energy firm Naftogaz sweetened a debt-restructuring offer to its bondholders on Friday in a bid to break a months-long deadlock in efforts to bring the company out of default.

The main improvements to the proposal included offering to pay 5% of its already-defaulted 2022 bond and an overdue 'coupon' payment, which together would add up to around $30 million.

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It also offered to increase the interest rate on that bond's coupon to 7.65% from 7.375% and pay a 0.5% "consent fee" to holders of its 2026 bond if they, like 2022 bondholders, agreed to split-up the payments of their debt into two separate lumps.

"We are trying to make a fair and dignified proposal," Naftogaz's new CEO Oleksiy Chernyshov told a conference call, describing it as a huge effort for the state firm during a full-fledged war.

Naftogaz accounted for almost 17% of Kyiv's budget revenue and employed more than 50,000 people before Russia's invasion just over a year ago.

Its underground storage facilities can hold over 30 billion cubic metres of gas, making them the third largest in the world after the United States and Russia. It also has Europe’s second largest oil transportation pipeline network.

Ukraine's head of public debt management, Yuriy Butsa, who was speaking alongside Chernyshov on the call, said Naftogaz would also be suspending some of the dividends it pays to the government.

The sweetened offer will also add what was dubbed a "rendezvous clause", which means its can reassess the situation in mid-2024 and potentially bring forward some payments if the situation regarding the war is dramatically improved.

It was not specified exactly when bondholders would vote on the new offer but both Chernyshov and Ukraine's restructuring advisors Lazard said that some of calculations were based on a mid-April agreement.

(Reporting by Marc Jones, editing by Jorgelina do Rosario, Editing by Louise Heavens)