Viernes, 7 de Noviembre de 2008, 9:30hs
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Fuente: Reuters
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MERCADOS - Deuda
Banesto, La Caixa, HSBC might control Metrovacesa
* Creditors could swap debt for Metrovacesa shares
* HSBC, Banesto and La Caixa are leading lenders
* Banesto has 31 pct of company as collateral for loan
By Andres Gonzalez
MADRID, 27 Oct . - Spanish banks Banesto
and La Caixa and Britain's HSBC may become the core
shareholders of Metrovacesa , in a move echoing the
takeover of fellow real estate firm Colonial in April.
The three banks are leaders of credit syndicates with more
than 2.6 billion euros ($3.3 billion) in outstanding loans to
Metrovacesa's owners, the Sanahuja family.
The Sanahujas have put up their 80 percent stake in
Metrovacesa as collateral, according to loan documents.
The Catalan family said on Thursday that creditors are
prepared to consider exchanging the debt for stakes in
Metrovacesa that could total over 50 percent of the group's
shares plus some of its real estate assets.
Metrovacesa is facing Spain's biggest property crisis in
recent years with a debt pile of 7.9 billion euros and crippling
restrictions on corporate credit.
After missing its October 31 deadline to pay the 240 million
pounds it owes UK insurer Legal & General for London's
Walbrook Square development, the company said on Friday it had
agreed to pay the sum in instalments up to October 2010.
The next deadline is November 27, when Metrovacesa is
obliged to pay off a 810 million pound bridge loan it secured
with HSBC to acquire the bank's London offices.
HSBC also has exposure to the Sanahuja family's debts in the
form of a 582 million euro loan backed by 7 million Metrovacesa
shares -- equivalent to 10 percent of the company.
The Sanahujas have a further 1.650 billion euro loan, backed
by 55 percent of Metrovacesa's stock, with a Banesto-led
syndicate that also includes Caja Madrid, Banco Sabadell
and Banco Popular .
Banesto holds 31.5 percent of Metrovacesa as collateral
against its share of the loan though.
La Caixa's syndicate, which includes Barclays ,
savings bank Caixa Catalunya and the Catalan regional
government's credit agency, has about 14.6 percent of
Metrovacesa as collateral.
If the deal goes ahead, Metrovacesa could become the second
Spanish property company to fall into the hands of creditors
after the banks that lent Colonial's main shareholders
about 2 billion euros took stakes in the firm in April.
(Additional reporting by Jonathan Gleave; editing by John
Stonestreet)
($1=.7815 Euro)