Chorus, the telecommunications network company carved out of Telecom, won't need to tap too much of a bridging loan after securing a $1.35 billion syndicated bank facility.
Chorus, which officially demerged from Telecom today, added $350 million to the facility due to strong demand from local and foreign financial institutions, chief financial officer Andrew Carroll said in a statement. No interest rate was stated, though Telecom's effective weighted interest rate for long-term debt at a fixed rate was 7.7 per cent, according to its 2011 annual report.
"This means we can get on with building our fibre network with even greater funding certainty," Carroll said.
The facility is made up of two equal tranches of $675 million over three and five years, and means it will probably make "very limited drawings" on a $2 billion bridging facility with Citibank New Zealand, ANZ National Bank and Westpac Banking.
The 364-day unsecured bridge loan was put in place to pay for assets from Telecom and had an assumed effective interest rate of 5.44 per cent, according to the demerger documents. The syndicated bank facility was envisaged as repaying draw-downs on the bridging loan.