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Dial Issues Notes To Reduce Debt

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By: TOM BRANNA

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Now that it’s officially on the selling block, consumer products maker Dial Corp. has to do something to reduce its debt load if it wants to attract a buyer. The company will do just that, it said today, as it plans to sell $200 million of five-year senior unsecured notes in the next few weeks to pay down bank debt.

In a press statement, chief financial officer Conrad Conrad said the note sale is part of Dial’s strategy to boost earnings “with a goal of maximizing value,” even as the company tries to become “part of a larger enterprise.”

Banc of America Securities LLC and Deutsche Banc Alex. Brown are arranging the note sale. Analysts have said Dial could fetch about $2 billion in a sale, with price estimates ranging from $19 to $22 per share. Dial shares traded Friday morning on the New York Stock Exchange unchanged at $16.78. They have risen 53 percent this year,from $11.

Dial has about $1.6 billion in annual sales, making it tough, analysts said, for the company to compete with bigger rivals such as Cincinnati-based Procter & Gamble Co. which reported $9.58 billion in revenue in its most recent quarter alone.

Credit rating agency Moody’s Investors Service rates Dial’s existing senior unsecured debt “Baa3,” its lowest investment grade, with a stable outlook. Another agency, Standard & Poor’s, last week cut Dial’s senior unsecured debt to a roughly equivalent “BBB-minus,”reflecting Dial’s “narrow product portfolio and weak financial profile,” with a developing outlook.

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