Solutia Bondholders Open To Restructuring Plan

St. Louis, Oct 21--Solutia Inc. bondholders appear to be open to the company's plan to restructure $1.25 billion in debt, announced last week. But while most say that the company should be able to achieve an out-of- bankruptcy solution, particularly given its recent positive news, significant uncertainties remain, in particular longer-term concerns over the company's viability. Solutia said late last week that it has hired restructuring experts and attorneys to assist the company in its discussions with bondholders. No proposals have been outlined to date. "This is a recognition of the fact that it is probable we'll want to have conversations with them (the bondholders), which is not something you can prepare for overnight," said Kevin Wilson, Solutia's treasurer. The restructuring announcement surprised some bondholders, given that it came on the heels of several positive developments for the St. Louis, Mo.-based nylon manufacturer, including an unexpectedly low settlement for environmental contamination litigation and subsequent to that, a successful $350 million bank credit refinancing. It also comes just ahead of the company's third quarter conference call this Friday. "Following the PCB settlement (the environmental contamination litigation) and the successful bank refinancing, a new bond deal to refinance upcoming maturities seems more appropriate than a restructuring," said Norm Boucher, portfolio manager at Putnam Investments' high yield bond group. Putnam has over $70 billion of fixed income assets under management. Solutia, Monsanto Co., Pfizer's Pharmacia unit and the companies' commercial insurers said in August that they had reached a cash settlement of $600 million with plaintiffs in two cases alleging environmental contamination and health problems. These stemmed from the companies' use of polychlorinated biphenyls, an electrical insulator banned in the 1970s. Under the terms of the agreement, Solutia will pay $50 million over 10 years, with a first payment of $2.5 million in each case due in 2004. News of the agreement sent the company's stock and bonds soaring, with the bonds jumping 20 cents on the dollar. Those gains are one reason why bondholders are likely to go along with a restructuring offer from the company as many had bought their bonds at discounted, pre-litigation-settlement prices, said one investor. But while he expects Solutia to achieve an out-of-bankruptcy arrangement, he warned that bondholders won't just roll over for the company. Since the restructuring announcement, the bond market has supported the notion that it isn't the death knell for Solutia, at least not in the short term. The putable bonds, the 6.72% notes which can be sold back to the company in September 2004 and the company's short term, 11.25% bonds due in 2009 were quoted down about five cents on the dollar at 91 cents on the dollar bid, 93 offered, and 92 cents bid, 94 cents offered respectively late Monday. The optimism reflected in these bond prices may be transitory only, said Bob Amenta, senior investment analyst at 40|86 Advisors, previously Conseco Capital Management, with $26 billion in assets under management. Because no details of the restructuring have been announced yet, there is nothing to react to, he said. Bondholders expect the company to include all bondholders in its restructuring offer, not just those holding the putable bonds. They also note that the successful bank credit refinancing has freed up assets that the company could use as collateral in future debt offerings. Long-Term Worries Persist But the company still faces significant longer-term challenges - and that's reflected in the 30-year bonds, which are 30 cents on the dollar lower than the putable bonds and the other short-term bonds, said Amenta from 40|86 Advisors. The 7 3/8% bonds due 2027 were quoted at 60 cents bid, 63 cents offered late Monday. One question