Sharp Securing Another $313M in Bank Loans

Bloomberg reports that Sharp is set to receive $313 million (30 billion yen) in loans from three separate banks this week to help the struggling Japanese display maker get back on its feet. These banks will join a 360 billion yen syndicated loan established by Sharp's main lenders.

According to unnamed sources, Resona Bank Ltd., Mizuho Trust & Banking Co., and Mitsubishi UFJ Trust & Banking Corp. will each lend 10 billion yen. Mizuho Corporate Bank Ltd. and Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd. will supply the syndicated loan, which matures at the end of June.

"It can be interpreted as a sign of a more supportive stance [by lenders]," said Takao Matsuzaka, a Tokyo-based credit analyst at Daiwa Securities Co. "The collaboration on panels between Samsung and Sharp may have enhanced Sharp’s reputation among lenders."

This news arrives after Sharp president Takashi Okuda hinted during a press conference on Thursday that talks of investments from Foxconn are being cancelled. Both sides were expected to come to an agreement by the end of the month.

Sources said that Sharp's decision to halt talks with Foxconn stemmed from possible bank loans as the result of its capital alliances with Qualcomm and Samsung. However, Foxconn still claims that negotiations are ongoing, and that it will continue to negotiate with Sharp to "seek any possible breakthrough."

"We are hoping to get as many financial institutions as possible to join the syndicated lending initiated by our main banks," a rep told Bloomberg.

Samsung and Qualcomm came to Sharp's rescue after the struggling display maker saw its stock plunge for seven straight months, reaching a nasty low of 143 yen in October 2012. Samsung purchased 10.4 billion yen of Sharp stock while Qualcomm is investing up to 9.9 billion yen in a two-step transaction.

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  • dalethepcman
    After Samsung bought out Sony's portion of their joint display venture, they really can't afford to let Sharp fail. That would be like Intel letting AMD go bankrupt. Its more economical to invest in your failing competitor, than to be subject to scrutiny for being a Monopoly. It's also much easier to price fix the market which both of these manufacturers have been found guilty of. Sure there are a few other manufacturers of displays, but calling them a competitor to Samsung's display division is like calling VIA or IBM an competitor in the CPU market to Intel, sure they make CPU's but they aren't really competition.
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