Rakuten’s Costly Junk Bonds Signal Challenge for Japanese Billionaire Mikitani

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(Bloomberg) -- After five straight years of losses, billionaire Hiroshi Mikitani’s Rakuten Group Inc. is trying to bounce back from a move into mobile that cost it billions of dollars. Doing so is proving expensive.

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The Japanese conglomerate, which boosted its overseas profile in recent years with sponsorship deals that have included Stephen Curry’s Golden State Warriors and FC Barcelona, raised $3.8 billion in two separate issuances so far this year as it wrestles with a mountain of debt coming due.

To get the deals away, Rakuten had to offer some of the highest coupons of any borrower in the dollar corporate bond market this year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Its two junk bond deals have coupons of 11.25% and 9.75%.

This indicates that the group is paying the price for years of relentless expansion fueled by low-cost borrowings, part of a wider trend of telecommunications firms including Patrick Drahi’s Altice group that are struggling after interest rates rose sharply. In particular, the huge investment required to roll out Rakuten’s mobile network dragged gauges of its creditworthiness down to junk.

Rakuten is unlikely to be able to sell new bonds to institutional investors in Japan given its present rating, several bankers with direct knowledge of previous deals said, which complicates refinancing efforts. The firm and its subsidiaries have about $4.4 billion of notes issued in yen and dollars that mature by June 2025, Bloomberg data show.

Rakuten will consider accessing the domestic and international bond markets, a spokesperson said in an email Thursday. The company is pursuing a financial strategy considering funding capacity and market trends, the spokesperson said.

“Although liquidity is improving, Rakuten will still need more funds to fill the gap,” said Adrien Letellier, a credit analyst and portfolio manager at Bordier & Cie in Geneva, who holds some of the conglomerate’s debt. “It could come from yen hybrid bonds, further asset monetization and additional bond issuance later this year.”

Rakuten has been able to chip away at its maturity wall by taking advantage of the rally in credit as investors lock in high yields before the Federal Reserve cuts interest rates. Last week’s $2 billion bond sale gives the group, a competitor to Amazon.com Inc. in Japan, more breathing room to decide on the best route forward for managing its liabilities.