F1 News: Williams confirms loans brought £28m into company
The Williams Formula 1 team has formally confirmed that the loan arrangements it refinanced in April brought £28m into the company, with partial repyament due by April 2022 and the rest over a longer timeframe
As reported in April, Williams refinanced its corporate borrowings following the sale of Advanced Engineering division with loans involving Michael Latifi, father of Williams driver Nicholas, and banking group HSBC, with the newly released Williams Grand Prix Holdings annual report for 2019 containing details of the refinancing despite it occurring after the reporting period.
The new arrangement replaces loans originally agreed with HSBC in 2015 which were paid off as part of the refinancing.
Williams says the change was necessary after the sale of its Advanced Engineering division in December.
There are two distinct elements, with one involving the land, factory and other assets in Grove and the second over 100 heritage cars that span the years 1978 to 2019.
The team states: "The new financing arrangements retain long-standing banking partners HSBC in combination with new financing partners. The total funds provided to the group under this new arrangement is $45m.
"$25m has been received and secured against the group's land, building, plant and machinery, repayable in full in April 2022. Interest of 5% is payable annually and further interest of 5% per annum is rolled up to be repaid in April 2022.
"A further $20m has been received secured against the group's heritage assets. Interest of 5% is payable annually commencing from April 2020 whilst the principal of the loan will be repaid by equal annual instalments over a five-year period ending in 2026."
Although the two loans total $45m, after costs and the repayment of the original 2015 HSBC loans that actually translates into an injection of the sterling equivalent of around $35m: "The total amount received by the group in pound sterling, net of any charges and repayment of amounts owing to HSBC, is £28m."
Williams announced on Friday that it is undertaking a strategic review that could lead to a sale of the entire company, and the report makes it clear that both loans will be "repaid promptly upon proceeds of any assets the lending is secured against."
"Overall this represents an effective use of the group's assets and provides us with the financial reserves required to fund the team during the current uncertain environment," Williams CEO Mike O'Driscoll, said.
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