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Apple plans $5 billion bond offering to cover stock repurchases, dividends, capital needs (Updated)

Having filed a prospectus today with the SEC, Apple plans to offer around $5 billion in bonds, following a 2013 bond offering of $17 billion, and a 2014 offering of $12 billion. While Apple’s corporate coffers stand at over $178 billion after its most recent record-breaking quarter, even thriving companies sometimes use bond offerings to fund projects, lessening tax consequences in the process.

Deutsche Bank and Goldman Sachs put together the offering, which Apple says will be used towards

repurchases of our common stock and payment of dividends under our program to return capital to shareholders, funding for working capital, capital expenditures and acquisitions and repayment of debt.

As noted by The Wall Street Journal, the bonds will mature in 5 to 30 years, with a 10-year bond offering a 0.95% greater return than government-issued Treasurys. Apple carries a Moody’s rating of Aa1, the service’s second-highest rating, suggesting that the investment is exceptionally low-risk.

Update: Reuters reports a larger-than-expect amount was launched:

“Apple has launched a bigger than expected US$6.5 billion five-tranche bond on books heard to be around US $20 billion.

The deal was upsized from US$5bn and includes a US $1.25 billion fixed rate tranche at Treasuries plus 42bp; a US $1.25 billion seven-year at T+67bp; a US$1.5 billion 10-year at T+85bp; a US $2 billion 30-year at T+125bp and a US $500 million five-year floating rate note at three-month Libor plus 25bp.”

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Comments

  1. Rich Davis (@RichDavis9) - 9 years ago

    What the F is Tim Cook doing with a Stink Pad?

    • RicardoTuga - 9 years ago

      reply in correct post please!
      “first of all the image is obviously photoshopped, secondly it is to show the new relationship between Apple and IBM.”

    • Robert Knapp - 9 years ago

      I think he actually had some work to do and needed a real computer? You can walk around all the time just talking up luxury items… Maybe he had to finalize some sec reports, you would think he would have an assistant for that…. who knows.