By Taiga Uranaka
TOKYO (Reuters) - Toshiba Corp plans to meet with creditor banks on Tuesday to explain how it is addressing a massive charge that the Japanese company says it must take on its U.S. nuclear business, three bankers briefed on the meeting said.
The bankers told Reuters on Friday they expect creditors will agree not to call in loans while they discuss steps to aid the laptops-to-engineering conglomerate.
Toshiba officials could not immediately be reached for comment. The bankers were not authorised to speak with media on the matter and so declined to be identified.
Syndicated loans could be endangered because credit-ratings downgrades put Toshiba in violation of loan covenants, the bankers said, adding that it was routine for them to grant a waiver in such a case to avoid a funding crisis.
Toshiba, still recovering from a $1.3 billion (1.05 billion pounds) accounting scandal in 2015, shocked investors again last month by announcing cost overruns at a U.S. nuclear business bought in 2015 which could now mean a charge against profit that could top $4 billion.
Tuesday's "explanatory session" is also meant as a show of support for Toshiba, as major creditors present a united front for the borrower hit by a series of scandals and losses, one of the bankers said.
The three bankers said they did not expect Toshiba to present new, major information at the meeting, which they depicted as the start of the process of working out rescue plans.
Toshiba's top executives have said they will finalise the loss on the nuclear business by mid-February, whereas sources have told Reuters they expect Toshiba to give its bankers an idea of the scale of the problem late this month.
Toshiba chairman Shigenori Shiga said on Thursday the company expects banks "will continue to provide support."
One person close to the company has said the charge on the nuclear business could run as high as 500 billion yen (3.5 billion pounds), compared with shareholders' equity of 363 billion yen.
The Japanese firm said cost overruns at U.S. power projects handled by the CB&I Stone & Webster Inc business it acquired last December from Chicago Bridge & Iron Co NV (CB&I) would be much greater than initially expected, requiring the huge writedown.
Toshiba's Westinghouse Electric Co LLC subsidiary is engaged in a legal and accounting row with CB&I, which has argued in court that it expected a relatively small payment from Westinghouse of only $161 million when the deal closed on the understanding that the latter was taking on a challenged business.