HomeNewsWorldMicrosoft sells USD 2.25 bn of debt at low rates

Microsoft sells USD 2.25 bn of debt at low rates

Microsoft Corp on Thursday sold USD 2.25 billion of bonds at close to record low borrowing levels as it looks for cheap ways of raising cash to fund its share buybacks and dividend payouts.

February 04, 2011 / 08:26 IST

Microsoft Corp on Thursday sold USD 2.25 billion of bonds at close to record low borrowing levels as it looks for cheap ways of raising cash to fund its share buybacks and dividend payouts.


The world's largest software company, making its third trip to the US corporate bond market in two years, has USD 41 billion in cash and short-term investments on its balance sheet, but likes to borrow as the most of that cash is locked up overseas.


The proceeds of the debt sale are for general corporate purposes, including working capital, expenditures, stock buybacks, acquisitions and dividends, according to the company's regulatory filing.


With a stagnant stock price over the past 10 years, Microsoft likes to reward shareholders, spending more than USD 170 billion on dividends and share repurchases in that time.


In its latest offering, Microsoft sold USD 750 million of five-year notes at a yield spread of 38 basis points over comparable Treasuries, close to a record low, according to syndicate sources.


The second tranche comprised USD 500 million of 10-year notes, at 48 basis points over Treasuries and the third tranche was USD 1 billion of 30-year bonds at 68 basis points over Treasuries.


That makes it one of the more tightly priced bonds this year, but the slight payout did not deter investors, which have flooded the bond market this year looking to diversify out of financials, snapping up recent debt from Anheuser-Busch InBev Worldwide and Kimberly-Clark Corp.


Microsoft's debt offering was massively oversubscribed, with USD 6 billion of orders placed, according to market sources.


The company's shares fell less than 1% as the tech-heavy Nasdaq rose slightly.



Strong credit


With AAA ratings from Standard & Poor's and Moody's, Microsoft is one of the strongest U.S. companies, with its USD 41 billion cash pile and a mere USD 8.5 billion in outstanding senior unsecured debt.


The majority of that cash is held overseas -- as most of Microsoft's revenue comes from outside the United States -- so the company likes to raise cash from bond investors rather than pay high tax rates to repatriate cash.


With a stock trading at the same level as 10 years ago, Microsoft is a major buyer of its own shares, repurchasing USD 5 billion worth alone in the last quarter, out of a USD 40 billion repurchase program that expires in 2013.


Last September, the company hiked its quarterly dividend 23% to 16 cents per share, declaring USD 1.3 billion in dividends in the last quarter.


Microsoft only started paying a dividend in 2003, and surprised the market with a special dividend of USD 3 per share the year after, dispersing more than USD 30 billion to investors in one go.


Microsoft generally makes dozens of small acquisitions per year, but has not made a large deal since its USD 6 billion purchase of web ad firm aQuantive in 2007, which was not a success.


Bank of America Merrill Lynch, Credit Suisse, Goldman Sachs, HSBC, Morgan Stanley and RBS are lead managers on the sale.

Last week Microsoft reported record quarterly revenue of USD 19.95 billion and net profit of USD 6.63 billion, boosted by strong sales of its Windows operating system and its new Kinect hands-free gaming system.

first published: Feb 4, 2011 08:13 am

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