Mattel shares plunge after it abruptly cancels debt offering

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NEW YORK: Barbie-maker Mattel saw its share price sink Friday after the company canceled a debt offering due to a “whistleblower” complaint.

The toymaker revealed few details about the situation in a terse securities filing late Thursday, saying only that the debt issue was “terminated” to give the company opportunity to investigate an “anonymous whistleblower letter.”

A file photo shows Barbie doll’s 125th “career”, a news anchor, in the Mattel display at the annual Toy Fair, February 14, 2010 in New York. Photo: AFP

The company planned to refinance $250 million in debt, had been scheduled to close the offer Thursday.

“The company intends to refinance its 4.350% Senior Notes due October 2020 prior to maturity,” Mattel said.

The share price fell more than 12 percent to $11.81 in late-morning trading Friday.

Analysts said suspending a planned debt issue is highly unusual and the drop in shares reflected increased uncertainty over the company’s financial position.

But the lack of information in the filing made it impossible to speculate on the content of the whistleblower complaint, they said.

“You would think there is something related to a financial component in the financing, but is it meaningful? Is it negligible? There is no frame of reference,” said Morningstar analyst Jaime Katz.

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CFRA Research analyst Camilla Yanushevsky said the filing adds to concerns about the Mattel’s financial position and high debt level that skews the risk of newer ventures “heavily to the downside.”

Mattel’s chief executive Ynon Kreiz has described the company as being in a “multi-year turnaround” as it cuts administrative and manufacturing costs and announces new projects, such as a live-action “Barbie” movie with actress Margot Robbie.

In July, the toymaker reported a loss of $108 million in the second quarter, an improvement on the $240.9 million loss a year earlier.

The company’s results have been most recently dented by the recall of a Fisher-Price infant sleeper due to baby fatalities, and incident that  hit results by some $30.4 million so far in 2019 and raised questions about brand reputation.– AFP

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