Chinese EV maker Nio raises $1 bln in convertible bond deal

[ad_1]

Chinese EV brands face steep ramp-up in Europe

An NIO ET7 car model is presented at the NIO House, the showroom of the Chinese premium smart electric vehicle manufacture NIO Inc. in Berlin, Germany August 17, 2023. REUTERS/Annegret Hilse/File Photo Acquire Licensing Rights

SYDNEY, Sept 20 (Reuters) – Chinese electric vehicle maker Nio Inc (9866.HK) said on Wednesday it had raised $1 billion in a two-tranche convertible bond from which it intends to use the proceeds to pay down debt and strengthen its balance sheet.

The company raised $500 million in a six-year put-four convertible bond and the same amount in a seven-year put-five bond.

The bonds will be senior, unsecured notes. The shorter dated bond has a 3.875% interest rate, while the seven-year bond’s rate is 4.625%, Nio said in a Hong Kong Stock Exchange announcement.

Nio’s Hong Kong shares dropped 12% in morning trade on Wednesday after the final pricing decision was set.

“The company plans to use a portion of the net proceeds from the notes offering to repurchase a portion of the existing debt securities … and the remainder mainly to further strengthen its balance sheet position as well as for general corporate purposes,” the company said.

Nio said in late August it planned to launch its first self-development mobile telephone later this month to improve the appeal of its cars with better software and connectivity.

Nio posted a net loss of 6.12 billion yuan ($839.51 million) in the second quarter, versus a loss of 2.75 billion yuan in the corresponding period a year earlier.

Reporting by Scott Murdoch in Sydney; Editing by Michael Perry and Jacqueline Wong

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Acquire Licensing Rights, opens new tab

Scott Murdoch has been a journalist for more than two decades working for Thomson Reuters and News Corp in Australia. He has specialised in financial journalism for most of his career and covers equity and debt capital markets across Asia and Australian M&A. He is based in Sydney.

[ad_2]

Source link