Walter Energy fighting to stay afloat financially
Company must make major deadline by Friday
Published: Sunday, May 10, 2015 at 3:00 p.m.
Last Modified: Sunday, May 10, 2015 at 3:27 p.m.
This week could be pivotal to the future of one of West Alabama's
largest employers, Walter Energy Inc., as it moves to meet a Friday
deadline to make a major debt payment. But even if the payment is made —
as the company said it would do last week — Walter Energy's still faces
an uphill battle.
The Hoover-based company
owns Jim Walter Resources, which operates underground coals mines near
Brookwood and employs more than 1,000 people in Tuscaloosa County.
Walter Energy also has and other coal mines, coal-related facilities and
methane gas operations in the state with most of that concentrated in
central West Alabama and Jefferson County. Most of its operations and
employees are in Alabama but the company also has coal mines in West
Virginia Canada and the United Kingdom.
So why is this week crucial to the company?
On
April 15, Walter Energy missed interest payments on on its 9.5 percent
senior secured notes due 2019 and its 8.5 percent senior notes due 2021.
Under the terms of the notes, the company has a 30-day grace period,
which it invoked. During that time, it could renegotiate a payment plan
with the creditors or come up with other means to make the payment.
The 30-day grace period ends this Friday.
On
Thursday, Walter Energy issued a statement saying "that on May 15, it
will be making interest payments under its indenture agreements with the
holders" of the two affected senior notes.
It
said it invoked the 30-day grace period "as it worked with its debt
holders to explore alternatives to recapitalize its balance sheet in
light of what has been a challenging met (metallurgical) coal pricing
environment. The company will continue to engage in such discussions
said.
The statement also said
Walter Energy "does not have a current liquidity issue, as it had
approximately $435 million of cash and investments as of March 31,
2015."
A Walter Energy spokesman said Friday that the company had no comment beyond the released statement.
Walter
Energy is a major producer of metallurgical coal, which is used in
steel making. The global demand for such coal now is down as is the
price paid such coal, which has hurt the company's bottom line.
Wall
Street speculation on whether Walter Energy would make the required
interest payment by the end of this week increased after Walter Energy
released its first quarter results on Tuesday.
The
quarterly financial report noted continuing losses. The filing with the
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission also said that recent events
"raise substantial doubt about our ability to continue as a going
concern."
In the 43-page quarterly filing, the company said:
"On
May 15, 2015, if the interest payment default is not cured, the default
would be considered an event of default and all outstanding notes will
become due and payable immediately without further action or notice. An
event of default would also trigger cross defaults in the company's
other debt obligations."
That could result in the debt holders demanding immediate payment and result in a bankruptcy reorganization filing, it said.
At
the end of its first quarter on March 31, Walter Energy said it "had
approximately $3.1 billion in principal amount of term loans, senior
notes, capital lease obligations and equipment financing obligations
outstanding."
Stock market analysts who
follow publicly traded company, have warned for months that Walter
Energy could file for bankruptcy reorganization this year.
Walter Energy acknowledged that possibility in its first quarter filing.
"Over
the course of the last three years, our results of operations,
including our operating revenues and operating cash flows, have been
negatively impacted by weak coal market conditions, depressed
metallurgical coal prices, reduced steel production and global steel
demand. Our cash flows from operations were insufficient to fund our
capital expenditure needs for 2014 and 2013, and we expect this trend to
continue in 2015. If market conditions do not improve, we expect our
liquidity to continue to be adversely affected," it said.
For
the short-term, the global demand for coal — particularly the
metallurgical coal used in steelmaking and primary coal coming from the
company's West Alabama mines — is expected to remain depressed during
2015, with a modest recovery expected in early 2016, Walter Energy said,
citing a global report on coal demand.
It
said "demand for our premium metallurgical coal products in core
markets has remained steady, and we believe that the long-term demand
for our metallurgical coal within all of our markets to be strong as
industry projections indicate that global steel making will continue to
require increasing amounts of high quality metallurgical coal.
"As such, we are focused on
the long-term metallurgical coal market. We remain committed to
aggressively controlling costs, improving operating performance and
productivity, reducing expenses and increasing liquidity. Although we
have responded to the deterioration in market conditions by curtailing,
and in some cases idling, higher-cost and lower-quality coal mines,
which include our Canadian operations, we have the capability to
increase our metallurgical coal production when the market rebounds to
take advantage of potential opportunities in this highly volatile
market."
Walter Energy's
stock closed Friday at 46 cents per share. Its 52-week high was $7.08
per share and its 52-week low of 30 cents occurred last week.
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