PDA

View Full Version : Brunswick stock rated as junk



2112
10-22-2008, 11:47 PM
Brunswick stock tumbles after downgrade to 'junk'

Tuesday, 21 October 2008 09:41

Moody’s Investors Service downgraded the rating on Brunswick Corp.’s debt to junk status, sending the company’s stock down about 22 percent yesterday.

The investment firm downgraded Brunswick's unsecured notes to Ba3 from Baa3 and downgraded its commercial paper rating to not prime from P3. Moody's also assigned a Ba2 corporate family rating and a Ba2 probability of default rating.

Brunswick stock fell to a 25-year low of $3.80 a share following Moody’s announcement, before closing at $4.49 a share yesterday. It opened today at $4.40 and was trading at $4.52 by mid-morning.

"The downgrade reflects our concerns that the continuing turmoil in the financial markets will result in a significant contraction in discretionary consumer spending over the foreseeable future and may put pressure on the company's dealer network and its liquidity position," said Kevin Cassidy, senior credit officer at Moody's Investors Service, in a statement.

Brunswick officials could not be reached this morning for comment.

Last week, Standard & Poor's Ratings Services lowered its long-term ratings on Brunswick Corp., including the corporate credit rating and senior unsecured debt rating, to BB- from BB+.

At the time, Brunswick spokesman Dan Kubera said, “From their comments, their action was based on economic and consumer factors affecting the entire marine industry that are outside of our control.”

In related news, analysts from Rochdale Securities revised downward their earnings estimates for Brunswick because of the continuing slump in U.S. marine sales and an expected slowdown in Europe.

The investment firm now expects Brunswick to report a loss of $1.74 per share for the 2008 full year, compared to previous estimates of a loss of 81 cents per share.

“With MarineMax likely canceling orders and Europe slowing precipitously, we now believe marine sales could decline 18 percent for the year,” said Hayley Wolff, senior equity research analyst for Rochdale Securities, in a report released Monday.

Marine industry sales were off 15 percent at the beginning of 2008, off 25 percent during the summer, and are now trending down about 40 to 50 percent, according to Wolff. Europe, which had been propping up the segment, has weakened sharply, she added.

“This will result in additional production shutdowns,” Wolff concluded.

— Melanie Winters
m.winters@tradeonlytoday.com

2112
10-22-2008, 11:48 PM
Time to start selling NXTs as stand alone drives:leaving:

bootdaddy
10-23-2008, 12:03 AM
I was just speaking with a friend today who was complaining about his GE stock and its staggering decline and told me a story about a friend of his who owns a boat dealership...

Short version:
Boat dealers finance their floor (inventory) directly from Brunswick who in turn gets it underwritten (financed) from GE Capital...new boat market is bad but GE cap is huge...right???

Whoops...GE Cap also underwrites used boat showroom "floors"...hmmm

Uh Oh!!!...Here's where it gets even uglier...GE cap also underwrites MASSIVE "floors" for RVs and a ton of other non-essential high ticket (high credit risk) items...

As Brunswick melts, they (and other producers/manufacturers) and defaulting dealerships are literally taking GE Cap (and GE parent) down with the ship...

I know GE is a widely held stock, but my guess is the stock could trade below 10 as the housing market bottoms and the credit crunch worsens...:(

bootdaddy
10-23-2008, 12:17 AM
In perusing the latest Hot Boat mag I saw where "Fountain recently announced they would be adding 250 jobs over the next 5 years and investing $12 million to expand its North Carolina facility. It also posted 2008 sales results approximately the same as prior year numbers."

I don't want to burst anybody's bubble here, especially if you live in NC and are trying to work for Reggie... But the above statement was nothing more than a political favor for the NC state representative who was present at the launch of the Baja 26 Outlaw when the statement was made.

People...let's have a reality check here. Where is the $12 million coming from because it won't be coming from any banks, and as far as hiring to grow into the face of this economic calamity???

It's just not going to happen...and it's just a matter of time until a financial statement from Fountain discusses massive credit default losses and possible reorganization...

Sorry for the hijack - just had to say it.

Fever Mike
10-23-2008, 01:49 AM
Reggie will save 'em!

bootdaddy
10-23-2008, 08:37 AM
Reggie will save 'em!

If he walks on water he's got a shot.

Not rooting against anybody, just balancing reality and rhetoric.