PI Global Investments
Alternative Investments

Honda Eyes Euro Bonds After Rethinking Its EV Plan


bility: Honda recently reported an annual loss, weighed down by large restructuring charges tied to its EV business and tougher competition, especially from Chinese automakers. Even with management forecasting a return to profit on cost cuts and strength in motorcycles, financing choices matter because they can raise or lower interest expense for years.

Why should I care?

For markets: Honda’s 400 billion yen euro-bond plan may hinge on the cost of currency hedges.

A euro bond only stays “cheap” if Honda can spend euros. If the bills are mostly in yen, the company typically converts the proceeds using a cross-currency swap – basically an agreement to exchange euros for yen now and reverse it later. In that case, Honda’s all-in borrowing cost becomes the bond’s euro interest rate plus or minus the cost of that hedge, which can shift with the gap between euro and yen rates and demand for hedging. Longer maturities usually lock in more of that uncertainty, so investors will watch how the 10-year tranche prices compared with the 3- and 6-year notes and what it implies for Honda’s future financing costs.



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