NYTimes. Two Weeks Later, ICO Follows Iridium Into Bankruptcy Court
August 28, 1999
By ANDREW POLLACK
OS ANGELES -- In the second bankruptcy filing this month for a satellite communications company, ICO Global Communications (Holdings) Ltd. filed for protection from its creditors Friday, after having failed to raise money from skittish investors.
The Chapter 11 filing in Wilmington, Del., came two weeks after the bankruptcy filing of Iridium LLC, which barely attracted any customers for its service using satellites to provide mobile telephone service anywhere in the world. Iridium's failure made investors reluctant to pour more money into ICO, which plans a similar service using its $4.7-billion system beginning in the third quarter next year.
ICO chief executive Richard Greco said Friday that the company planned to continue with its business. "Our Chapter 11 filing should provide ICO with the extra time needed to reorganize, recapitalize and complete our financing," he said in a statement issued from the company's headquarters in London.
"We believe that our actions will be successful and that ICO will emerge as a very effective competitor in providing global mobile satellite telephone services," said Greco.
Armand Musey, an analyst at Banc of America Securities, said the bankruptcy filing reflected a desire by ICO's investors to "buy some time" to see how a third competitor, Globalstar Telecommunications Ltd., fares.
Globalstar, which is backed by Loral Space & Communications, plans to begin service in late September. "They really want to see Globalstar validated before they put more money into ICO," Musey said.
A failure by ICO could cause Hughes Electronics Corp., which is building ICO's 12 satellites, to take a charge against earnings of $500 million, according to regulatory filings by Hughes. Richard Dore, a spokesman, said Friday that it was too early to tell how the bankruptcy filing would affect Hughes, a subsidiary of General Motors Corp. Hughes owns 2.6 percent of ICO as part of an agreement to eventually buy 4 percent of the company's stock for $93.8 million.
Shares of Hughes, however, rose $1.1875 Friday, to $52.625, apparently because investors think the company, which had been participating in attempts to rescue ICO, will now not put any more money into the company. Globalstar also rose $1.1875, to $28.875, because the possible failure of ICO leaves it with one less competitor. Shares of ICO, which brought $12 at the company's initial public offering last summer, fell 62.5 cents Friday, to $3.625, before trading was halted.
ICO was created by Inmarsat, an international organization recently turned into a corporation, which provides satellite communications to ships. Many of the investors in ICO are Inmarsat's members, telephone companies worldwide.
TRW is also a large investor, with 13.9 million shares, or 6.7 percent, according to an ICO prospectus. A TRW spokesman said it was too soon for the company to comment.
Although ICO had already asked for a delay in paying more than $40 million in interest due at the beginning of August, the bankruptcy filing surprised creditors. "They didn't telegraph this at all," said Luc Despins, a lawyer in New York who represents an informal committee of ICO bondholders. "We don't know why the company filed so soon and so suddenly."
Despins, who works for Milbank Tweed Hadley & McCloy, said the bondholders had not been threatening to push ICO into bankruptcy so there was no need for ICO to seek protection as a pre-emptive move.
ICO has already raised $3 billion of the $4.7 billion it estimates it needs to begin service. But with Iridium's problems clouding the market, ICO recently failed to raise $500 million from a public rights offering despite extending the deadline twice. It then announced a tentative agreement to secure $600 million from strategic investors, which reportedly included Hughes, but that plan also fell apart.
More recently, industry executives said, ICO was trying to raise a smaller amount, said to be $400 million. But that plan, which was to be voted on at an investor meeting in Paris on Saturday, has apparently fallen through as well.
The ICO bankruptcy is the latest blow to the satellite industry, which has also suffered from rocket and satellite failures, national security controversies and tighter export controls. But some segments of the market, particularly direct television broadcasting to home by Hughes' DirecTV and Echostar Communications, continues to do well.
Copyright 1999 The New York Times Company |