Roll up, roll up for the incredible Issa brothers! Rising rates make the financial high-wire act of the billionaires from Blackburn even more daring. See them juggle key assets Asda and EG Group in a bid to keep their balance!
The brothers own the supermarket chain and petrol station operator in partnership with buyout group TDR. Asda is buying the UK and Irish assets of EG Group for £2.3bn ($2.8bn). The move should generate cost savings for Asda while reducing EG’s debts.
EG has net financial borrowings of some £8bn, compared with forecast ebitda of $1.6bn for the current year. It needs to bring its debt tally down to a safer level. EG has been selling property in the US to do so.
Asda, meanwhile, plans to keep its financial leverage at 4.3 times ebitda, despite the cost of the acquisition. It will do so by selling real estate of its own and tapping the Issas and TDR for extra cash.
Asda will pay with £450mn of new equity, £770mn of new debt and £1.1bn from property deals. The new business will contribute £200mn of ebitda and deliver £100mn of so-called “scale benefits” within three years.
EG will use £2.3bn in proceeds alongside the $1.4bn from US property deals to get its financial leverage down to five times. It is targeting leverage in the mid-four times in the medium term. EG has some £7bn of loans and bonds maturing in 2025, according to Bloomberg.

The market appears to approve of the deleveraging plan. Spreads on the debt of Asda and EG have been falling. However, the Issas are unlikely to have lost their appetite for risk. They want Asda to expand.
Grocery peers have most to lose. High debt costs had been expected to restrain Asda, the UK’s price-leading supermarket. That is not happening, despite a cost of living crisis. Asda’s ebitda fell by a quarter last year. The Issas sacrificed margins to maintain market share.
City sceptics question how long the Issas can keep it up. But private entrepreneurs have flexibility that quoted businesses lack. With £9.5bn of property still on the books, Asda and the Issas have plenty in reserve to keep on wowing the crowd.
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