Session 5 - aciclaw.org
Transcription
Session 5 - aciclaw.org
UNITRANCHE FINANCING AND SECOND LIEN LOANS Carolyn Alford, King & Spalding Sarah Borders, King & Spalding Alfredo Cantoral, AllState Randall Klein, Goldberg Kohn April 30, 2015 ACIC Spring Investment Forum Unitranche v. Other Financings • 1st Lien/2nd Lien Debt • Subordinated Debt • Mezzanine with a Lien • Unitranche Debt 2 1st Lien/2nd Lien Financing • Two separate groups of lenders • Two separate agents • Two sets of loan documents • Two liens • One common collateral pool • Lien subordination 3 Subordinated Debt Financing • Two separate groups of lenders • Two agents • One Lien in one collateral pool in favor of senior lender • Sub Debt lenders are generally unsecured • “Mezz with a lien” • Payment subordination 4 Unitranche Financing • Single debt agreement with borrower, with single set of covenants • Single set of collateral documents • Single collateral pool • Single agent • Multiple forms of unitranche 5 Evolution of the Unitranche Product • History • Size of Market • Players • Trends 6 Advantages of Unitranche • Speed of Transaction • Certainty of Closing • Reduced Closing Costs • Post-Closing Administration Simplicity 7 Disadvantages of Unitranche • Less established market and no model forms • More “Last Out” friendly • Less precedent for assessing enforceability • Syndication complications • Bankruptcy complications 8 Agreement Among Lenders (AAL) • Separate agreement that creates separate “first out” and “last out” tranches of the unitranche • Reallocation of interest between lenders • Payment waterfall • Voting rights of lenders • Purchase option • Remedy standstill 9 Evaluating Unitranche Risk • Borrower are often not a party to AAL. • Agent’s hold in each tranche is important. • Enforceability of AAL, in and out of bankruptcy, is less certain. • Risk of “secret agreement”. 10 Waterfall • Prior to trigger event, payments are allocated per the debt agreement (subject to interest/fee skim). • After trigger event, AAL reallocates all collateral proceeds and all payments received post trigger to affect first out/last out priority. Agent fees and expenses paid first, followed by all first out amounts, and finally all last out amounts. 11 Waterfall Trigger events are highly negotiated, and often include: • Payment default • Bankruptcy • Financial covenant default (sometimes an earlier trigger than default) • Commencement of exercise of remedies • Failure to timely deliver a borrowing base certificate (ABL deals). 12 Voting Rights • Amendments generally are Required Lenders vote (subject to sacred rights). • Required lenders may require more than 50% of the entire facility (in which case the larger tranche controls). • AAL may override required lender votes to require a majority of first out lenders and a majority of last out lenders. 13 Voting Rights • AAL may also include a list of items requiring approval of all lenders. • Upon a trigger event, majority of first out lenders may control amendments on certain aspects of the debt documents. • Trigger events may include payment default, bankruptcy default, or exercise of remedies, with delivery of notice to the relevant tranche. • Affiliate lender and defaulting lenders complicate voting further. 14 Exercise of Remedies • Debt agreement may provide that a majority of lenders control remedies (which would mean the larger tranche controls) or that a majority of either class or both classes is required to institute remedies. • Control over remedies may change based on trigger events. • Standstill Periods: • First Out Lenders • Last Out Lenders 15 Bankruptcy Risks • Less precedent on enforceability • Post-petition interest, fees & expenses • Classification of claims and voting on a bankruptcy plan • Credit bidding • Sale of assets • DIP financing/use of cash collateral 16 Purchase Option • Provides last out lenders with right to purchase the first out obligations upon the occurrence of certain trigger events. • First out lenders may have a limited right to purchase the last out obligations. • Principal way to resolve disagreement on how to proceed in a restructuring/workout. 17 Assignability • Consent rights • Agent • Borrower • Right of first offer/Right of first refusal • Cross over lender issues 18