HPE Sounds Out Investors for $9.5 Billion Debt Deal
(Bloomberg) -- Hewlett Packard Enterprise Co. is sounding out investors on Wednesday for a potential $9.5 billion debt package to help fund its acquisition of Juniper Networks.
Most Read from Bloomberg
Housing’s Worst Crisis in Decades Reverberates Through 2024 Race
For Tenants, AI-Powered Screening Can Be a New Barrier to Housing
Chicago Halts Hiring as Deficit Tops $1 Billion Through 2025
The multinational information technology firm is holding calls with potential bond investors starting at 10:00 a.m. New York time. JPMorgan Chase & Co. is coordinating logistics and a bond offering could follow. Any deal is expected to include $6.5 billion of investment-grade unsecured bonds maturing in five to 30 years and a $3 billion term loan, according to a company filing. The firm also priced $1.35 billion of preferred stock on Tuesday, according to a statement.
A representative for HPE declined to comment on the proposed transaction.
A bond sale would be the latest to help fund acquisitions amid a deluge of issuance this year. Oneok Inc. sold $7 billion of senior unsecured notes in six parts on Tuesday and gathered $31 billion worth of orders. Last month, Kroger Co. sold $10.5 billion of notes to help pay for its takeover fellow grocer Albertsons Cos. in one of the biggest corporate bond deals of the year.
Borrowers are rushing to debt markets to lock in future financing needs before the US presidential election in November. And in anticipation that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates later this month, the average yield for blue-chip firms to borrow at has fallen to the lowest in more than two-years.
Read: Companies Are Racing to the US Debt Market — and Here’s Why
HPE in January agreed to buy Juniper for $14 billion in an effort to grow its presence in networking — technology that directs the flow of information between devices and across the Internet — that would double the size of that business, the company said. The deal was cleared by the UK’s antitrust watchdog and the European Union’s regulators last month.
(Corrects company name in headline on a story that ran on Sept. 11.)
Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek
EV Leases Go as Low as $20 a Month to Help Dealers Clear Their Lots
China Can Avoid Japan’s Lost Decades If It Follows Korea’s Path
The Covid Pandemic Left an Extra 13 Million Americans Single
US Oil Boom Turns Kamala Harris Into an Unlikely Fracking Supporter
Putting Olive Oil in a Squeeze Bottle Earned This Startup a Cult Following
©2024 Bloomberg L.P.