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Strategies & Market Trends : Making Money is Main Objective

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To: Softechie who started this subject4/2/2001 1:08:50 PM
From: Softechie   of 2155
 
DJ Advanced Radio Bankruptcy Spooks Winstar Investors
30 Mar 18:48


By Carol S. Remond and Christine Nuzum
Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES

NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--Investors sold off debt, and to a lesser extent, equity
of Winstar Communications Inc. (WCII) Friday, after being spooked by the
bankruptcy filing of another broadband provider, Advanced Radio Telecom Corp.

(ARTT).

Winstar's creditors took the lead in the selloff, bringing the price of the
company's $600 million worth of 12.75% senior notes due 2010 to about 25 cents
on the dollar, down from about 35 cents a day earlier.

Winstar's shares, meanwhile, lost about 5.5% of their value, closing at $2.16
a share.

The fact that bondholders, some of Winstar's most senior investors, expect to
lose about 75 cents of each dollar loaned to the company indicates growing
concerns about the telecommunications firm's future.

Rumors abounded on Friday, including doubts about Winstar's vendor facility
with Lucent Technologies Inc. (LU). Speculation also included the possibility
that Winstar may be seeking debtor-in-possession financing, which would signal
that the company is preparing for some sort of restructuring.

"The only thing I can see is that if they've violated the covenants of their
bank debt, the banks may not let them draw. That could be a reason for them to
be looking for DIP," a hedge fund manager said.

A spokesman for Winstar declined to comment on Friday's rumors.

Analysts took the market activity in stride and said that they would, like
most investors, reserve judgment until Winstar files its annual report, which
is expected by Saturday.


Heavy Debt Load A Concern

On paper, Winstar looks like it has enough cash to last through the rest of
the year. The company had about $302.7 million in cash and cash equivalents at
the end of September and another $53.5 million in easily negotiable short-term
investments.

Winstar's most recent quarterly filing showsthat the company burned through
about $368 million in the first nine months of 2000.

What has investors particularly worried is Winstar's heavy debt load. The
company's regulatory filing shows about $3.4 billion in long-term debt. Winstar
paid $95.6 million in quarterly interest on its debt in the third quarter of
2000.

Concerns about whether the company will be able to continue servicing its
debt, especially in a market environment where it's unlikely to be able to
raise new cash, have been mounting.

Rating agency Standard & Poor's put Winstar's "B-minus" unsecured debt rating
on credit watch with negative implications earlier this month. The agency said
in a release that it was worried about Winstar's increased reliance on vendor
and bank debt over the past year.

Winstar secured a new $1.15 billion senior credit facility from a group of
commercial banks last year. Amounts drawn under the credit facility, which is
now fully tapped, are secured by substantially all of Winstar's assets.

Winstar's bank debt was trading at about 59 cents on the dollar Friday.

Winstar's stock has lost 82% of its value in the last month.

-Carol S. Remond, Dow Jones Newswires, 201 938 2074
-Christine Nuzum, Dow Jones Newswires, 201 938 5172

(END) DOW JONES NEWS 03-30-01
06:48 PM
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