Syndicated Loan Terminology Flashcards
364-day Facility
A revolving credit facility that has a term of a year or less
Administrative Agent
Bank that handles all interest and principal payments and monitors the loan
Administrative Agent Fee
Annual fee typically paid to administer the loan (including to distribute interest payments to the syndication group)
Affirmative Covenants
These covenants state what action the borrower must take to be in compliance with the loan. They are usually boilerplate and require a borrower to pay the bank interest and fees, provide audited financial statements, maintain insurance, pay taxes, etc.
Agent
Arranger title used to indicate the lead bank when there is no other conclusive title available, as is often the case for smaller loans
Amend to Extend
This technique allows an issuer to push out part of its loan maturities through an amendment rather than a full-out refinancing. These transactions have 2 phases. The first is an amendment in which at least 50.1% of the bank group approves the issuer's ability to roll some of all existing loans into longer-dated paper. The new paper is pari passu with the exiting paper, but since it has a longer term, it carries a higher rate and sometimes more attractive terms. The second phase is the conversion, in which lenders can exchange loans for new loans.
Amendment Fee
Compensation paid to lenders if the borrower asks for a change in terms
Arranger Fee
Fee earned by the arrangers for working on the deal. A new leveraged loan can carry an arranger fee of 1-5% of the total loan commitment, depending on the complexity of the transaction, market conditions, and whether the loan is underwritten.
Arrangers
Commercial or investment banks that have a hand in underwriting and syndicating a loan
Asset Based Lending
Loans that are secured by specific assets and usually governed by a borrowing formula or a borrowing base. The most common type of asset-based loans are receivables and inventory items.
Asset Sales
One of the standard mandatory prepayments. Defined as net proceeds of asset sales, normally excluding receivables or inventories.
Assets Under Management (AUM)
The market value of all funds managed by a specific investment manager on behalf of investors
Assignment Sale
Type of secondary sale. The assignee becomes a direct signatory to the loan and receives interest and principal payments directly from the administrative agent
Average Break Price
The average price at which loans or bonds are initially traded in the secondary market after they close and allocate.
Average New-Issue Clearing Level
Simple average final all-in spread post flex, inclusive of all current LIBOR or LIBOR floors, if any
Average Pro Rata Spread
The average spread of the revolver and term loan A tranches
Average Retail New-Issue Spread
The average fee paid by the arranger to lenders joining the syndicate, tiered so that larger commitments earn larger fees. Fees of the pro rata tranches generally differ from those paid on institutional tranches
Axe Sheets
Lists from dealers with indicative secondary bids and offers for loans. Axes are simply price predications
Base Rates
Minimum rate that the loan will pay. LIBOR/Euribor are the most common base rates, but these can include prime, CD, and an array of other formats
Best-Efforts Deal
The arranger group commits to underwrite less than the entire amount of the loan, leaving the credit to the vicissitudes of the market. Traditionally, best-efforts syndications have been used for risky borrowers or for complex transactions.
Bids Wanted in Competition (BWIC)
A secondary auction of a portfolio of loans or bonds. Typically an account will offer up a portfolio of facilities via dealer. The dealer will then put out a BWIC, asking potential buyers to submit for individual names or the entire portfolio. The dealer will then collate the bids and award each facility to the highest bidder.
Bifurcated Collateral Structures
Issuer divides a collateral pledge between asset-based loans and funded term loans. Asset-based loans are secured by current assets like accounts receivable and inventories, while term loans are secured by fixed assets like property, plants, and equipment. Current assets are considered to be a superior form of collateral because they are more easily converted to cash.
Big Boy Letters
These letters typically ask public-side institutions to acknowledge that there may be information they are not privy to and they are agreeing to make the trade in any case. They are effectively big boys and will accept the risks.
Bilateral Credit Line
Loan agreements with only one lender and where the debt is not syndicated to a group
Book Building
The process by which arrangers revise terms to benefit borrowers but also ensure that enough lenders are willing to participate in the transaction.
Borrowing Base
The specific assets that secure asset-based loans. The size of the attached credit line is limited by a margin formula tied to the valuation of the underlying collateral
Break Price
The price at which loans or bonds are initially traded into the secondary market after they close and allocate
Bridge Loan
Loan that is intended to provide short-term financing to provide a bridge to an asset sale, bond offering, stock offering, divestiture, etc. Generally provided by arrangers as part of an overall financing package.
Build-Out Financing
Financing that supports a particular project, such as a utility plant, a land development deal, a casino, or an energy pipeline.
Business Development Company (BDC)
A US public company whose sold business purpose is to invest in small and mid-sized companies
Buyback
When an issuer or its private equity sponsor/owner buys back its senior debt below par in the secondary market in an attempt to reduce total debt
Compounded Annual Growth Rate (CAGR)
Annualized measure of an investment's growth rate over a multiyear time period
Capital Expenditures (CAPEX)
Investments in physical assets (e.g., PPE)
Cash Flow Loan
Form of Asset-Based Lending. A loan that may be secured by collateral but is repaid by cash flow.
Cash Flow Metrics
Various analytics to evaluate and monitor the cash flow generated by a company. They include operating cash flow and FCF.
CCC Downgrade Rate
The number of issuers who have had their corporate credit rating lowered to CCC over a given 12-month period divided by the number of corporate credit ratings at the beginning of that period.
Change of Control
When an issuer's ownership structure is significantly altered. It can be triggered by a merger, an acquisition of the issuer, or a change in the majority of the Board of Directors
Chapter 7
The US Bankruptcy Code that governs the process for liquidating a company and its assets
Chapter 11
The US Bankruptcy Code that governs the process for restructuring a company and its assets
Circled
When a loan or bond is fully subscribed at a given price it is said to be circled. After that, the loan or bonds moves to allocation and funding
Clearing Yield
Yield at which an instrument first breaks into the market
Collateralized Loan Obligation (CLO)
A structured security backed by a pool of loans. It uses leverage and is usually tiered with ratings ranging from AAA to equity.
CLO Risk Retention
Regulations for ensuring that CLO investors retain risk in the vehicles they are structuring or "skin in the game". CLO managers, beginning 12/24/2016, under section 941 of Dodd Frank, as investment managers, are required to retain no less than 5% of the credit risk of assets they securitized, except for pools of qualified mortgages. This retention requirement can be satisfied by either retaining horizontal interest, which is subordinated to all other interests (e.g., part of the equity tranche of a debt vehicle) or a vertical interest, which would receive a portion of payments made into each class of debt issued by the securitization.
Club Deal
A smaller loan - usually $25 - $100 million, but as high as $150 million - that is premarketed to a group of relationship lenders. The arranger is generally a first among equals, and each lender gets a full cut, or nearly a full cut of fees
Co-Agent/Managing Agent
This title is used mostly as an award for large commitments and is generally meaningless with regards to loan administration responsibilities
Commercial Bank
Financial institution that provides services such as accepting deposits and issuing loans
Commercial Paper
Unsecured short-term corporate debt
Commitment Fee
Fee paid to lenders on undrawn amounts under a revolving credit or a term loan prior to draw-down
Competitive Auction
When putting together financing for a transaction, a sponsor usually solicits bids from arrangers before awarding a mandate
Competitive Bid Option (CBO)
Allows the borrower to solicit the best bids from its syndicate group. The agent will conduct what amounts to an auction to raise funds for the borrower, and the best bids are accepted
Continuously Offered Closed-End Funds
Investors can buy into these funds each day at the fund's net asset value. Redemption, however, are made via monthly or quarterly tenders rather than each day
Contributed Equity
The sponsor's contribution to finance the LBO, calculated as the sponsor's equity divided by total transaction amount
Cost of Funds
A bank's own funding rate
Coupon-Clipping
A period when investors can expect income from yield without capital appreciation or loss
Covenant Amendment/Waiver/Relief
When an issuer has failed to maintain its financial covenants, it can appeal to lenders to relieve it of its requirements and waive the maintenance of those covenants for that time period. It can also, or alternatively, ask to amend the covenant levels to make them less rigorous.
Covenant-Lite
Loans that have bond-like financial incurrence covenants rather than traditional maintenance covenants that normally part and parcel of a loan agreement
Covenants
Various assurances by borrowers to do, or not do, certain things during the life of a credit
Cover Bid
The level at which a dealer agrees to essentially underwrite a BWIC or an auction. The dealer, to win the business, may give an account a cover bid, effectively putting a floor on the auction price.
Coverage Covenant
Requirement that the borrower maintain a minimum level of cash flow or earnings relative to specified expenses, most often interest, debt service (interest and repayments), and fixed charges (debt service, capital expenditures, and/or rent)
Coverage Ratio
A measure of the company's ability to meet its financial obligations, for example interest coverage. The higher the ratios, the better the ability to meet the commitments.
Credit Agreement
Document that contains the final terms and conditions of the loan
Credit Estimates/Private Ratings
Assessments made by the ratings agency on the creditworthiness of the company that are not publicly disclosed
Cross-Border
A transaction that issues tranches in 2 markets, usually the US and Europe
Cross-Guarantees
Formal assurances that the varied operating units associated with a borrower guarantee its assets as collateral
Cure Period
The amount of time that is granted to a borrower to cure any default
Current Assets
Balance sheet assets that are the most liquid - cash, cash equivalents, and accounts receivable
Current Liabilities
Balance sheet liabilities that are most subject to payment on demand - short-term debt and accounts payable
Current Ratio Coverage
Requirement that the borrower maintain a minimum ratio of current assets to current liabilities
Daily-Access Funds
Traditional open-end mutual fund products into which investors can buy or redeem shares each day at the fund's NAV
Debt Issuance
Generally, debt issuance refers to the volume of the high-yield or loan deal, or the collective volume of high yield and loan deals over a set period of time. In a loan deal, one of the prepayments from the lender to the borrower is net proceeds from debt issuance. The typical percentage required is 100%.
Debtor in Possession (DIP)
DIP loans are made to bankrupt entities in the US. These loans constitute super-priority claims on the bankruptcy distribution scheme, and thus sit ahead of all pre-petition claims. Many DIPs are further secured by priming liens on the debtor's collateral, or gaining a collateral lien that has priority over any pre-petition liens
Default
There are 2 types of loan defaults: technical defaults and payment defaults. Technical defaults occur when the issuer violates a provision of the loan agreement. For instance, if an issuer does not meet a financial covenant test or fails to provide lenders with financial information or some other violation that doesn't involve payments. A payment default happens when a company misses either an interest or principal payment. There is often a preset period during which an issuer can cure a default. After that, the lenders can take appropriate action, up to and including accelerating, or calling the loan
Default Rate
Calculated by either number of loans or principal amount. The formula is similar. S&P Global defines a default for the purposes of calculating default rates as a loan that is any of the following: rated D by S&P made to an issuer that has filed for bankruptcy, in payment default on interest or principal, or restructured in such a way as to create a material loss to the lender
Default Rate by Number of Loans
The number of loans that default over a given 12-month period divided by the number of loans outstanding at the beginning of that period
Default Rate by Principal Amount
The amount of loans that default over a 12-month period divided by the total amount outstanding at the beginning of the period
Default Risk
The likelihood of a borrower being unable to pay interest or principal on time
Delayed-Draw Term Loan
Lines of credit that may be drawn down for a given period. The issuer pays a fee during the commitment period and the lines are then repaid over a specified period. These are primarily used to purchase specified assets or equipment or to make acquisitions
Direct Lenders
A form of corporate debt provision in which lenders other than banks make loans to companies without intermediaries such as an investment bank, a broker, or a private equity firm. The borrowers are usually smaller or mid-sized companies
Disintermediation
The process where banks are replaced by institutional investors
Distressed Exchange
A negotiated tender in which classholders will swap their existed paper for a new series of bonds that typically have a lower principal amount and often a lower yield
Distressed Loans
Credits that are considered to be at a higher risk of defaulting. In the loan market, loans traded at less than 80 cents on the dollar are usually considered distressed. In the bond market, the common definition is a spread of 1000 bps or more.
Distressed Ratio
Share of the S&P/LSTA Loan Index that is trading below 80
Dividend Financing
When a company takes on debt and uses proceeds to pay a dividend to shareholders
Documentation Agent
Bank that handles the documents and chooses the law firm
EBITDA
Proxy for cash flow
Equity Bridge Loan
A bridge loan provided by arrangers that is expected to the repaid by a secondary equity commitment to a leveraged buyout
Equity Cures
These provision allow issuers to fix a covenant violation - exceeding the maximum leverage test for instance - by making an equity contribution
Equity Infusion
Typically seen in distressed situations. In some cases, the private equity owners agree to make an equity infusion in the company, or a new investor steps in to provide fresh capital to strengthen the company's balance sheet
Equity Issuance
The net proceeds of an issuer selling stock. Leveraged loans may require a borrower to prepay with proceeds of equity issuance. The typical percentage required is 25-50%
European Credit Funds
Open-ended pools of debt investments that are not subject to ratings oversight or restrictions regarding industry or rating diversification. They are generally lightly levered and allow managers significant freedom in picking and choosing investments
Evergreen
The option for borrowers - with consent of the syndicate group - to extend the facility each year for an additional year
Excess Cash Flow
Cash flow after all cash expenses, required dividends, debt repayments, capital expenditures, and changes in working capital. A borrower is sometimes required to prepay a leveraged loan with proceeds of excess cash flow
ETF
Funds that trade on a stock exchange. Typically, the funds are capitalized by an initial public offering. Thereafter, investors can buy and sell shares, but may not redeem them
Executive Summary
Part of the IM or bank book. Provides a description of the issuer, an overview of the transaction and rationale, sources and uses of debt being raised, and key statistics on the financials
Exit Financing/Exit Loans
These are loans that finance an issuer's emergence from bankruptcy in the US. Typically, the loans are prenegotiated and are part of the company's reorganization plan
Facility Fee
Paid on a facility's entire committed amount, regardless of usage. It is often charged instead of the commitment fee on revolving credits, as these typically have competitive bid options that allow a borrow to solicit the best bid from its syndicate group
Fair Value
Evaluation of price at which an asset would transact in the secondary market
Finance Companies
Companies that borrow money to fund their loans. Finance companies tend to play in smaller deals. They exist almost exclusively in the US, where they consistently represent less than 10% of the leveraged loan market
Financial Covenants
Requirements of a borrower's minimum financial performance. There are 2 types: maintenance and incurrence covenants.
First-Lien Debt (FLD)
Senior debt that holds the first priority on security
FLD/EBITDA
Ratio of first-lien debt to EBITDA. One of the main ratios used in leverage analysis and financial covenants
Fixed-and-Floating Lien
A lien that allows the borrower to dispose of assets without consent. However, the proceeds must go through certain channels, including certain designated accounts, so that the borrower has the right to freeze those assets under certain circumstances.
Flex
Margin flex language allows the arranger to change spreads during syndication to adjust the pricing. To entice investors to buy the credit, spreads are raised, or flexed up. When liquidity is high and demand outstrips supply, the spread is decreased, or reverse flexed. A structural flex occurs when the arranger adjusts the size of tranches during syndication to reflect liquidity levels. In highly liquid times, an arranger may move debt from the more expensive tranches, such as mezzanine, to cheaper tranches, such as second-lien or first-lien
Floating Rate
A spread over a base rate, typically LIBOR, that is periodically reset. Borrowers usually can lock in a given rate for one month to one year
Forward Calendar
A list of loans or bonds that have been announced but not yet closed. These include instruments that have yet to come to market and those actively being sold but not yet circled.
Four-B Loans
Loans rated BB+ to BB- by S&P and Ba1 to Ba3 by Moody's
Free-and-Clear Tranche
A form of covenant-lite loan that allows issuers to tap the market for additional loans that are free of the restrictions of incurrence tests
Full Vote
When all lenders are required to approve material changes such as RATS or collateral rights
General Corporate Purposes
Use of a loan for working capital, general operations, and other business as usual purposes
Go-Anywhere Fund
Global allocation funds are also called go-anywhere funds because they are very flexible with regards to the types of investments they can make. They can invest across all regions and asset classes, based upon the decisions of the management team
Hard Fee
A fee that may be applied to all repayments under a loan, including from asset sales and excess cash flow
High Yield Takeouts
High-yield bonds that are issued to refinance loans
Highly Leveraged Loan
For before 1996, refers to loans with margins of L+250 and above, and from 1996 to present, refers to loans with margins of L+225 and above
Hurdle Rates
The minimum required rate of return
Incurrence Covenants
Requirement that if an issuer takes a certain action involving financing it would still need to be in compliance after that activity
Industry Overview
Part of the IM or bank book. Provides a description of the company's industry and competitive position relative to its industry peers
IM/Bank Book
A description of the terms of the transaction. This typically includes an executive summary, investment considerations, a list of terms and conditions, an industry overview, and a financial model. If the issuer is seeking capital from non-bank investors, the arranger will prepare a public version of the IM stripped of all confidential information
Institutional Debt/Institutional Facilities
Tranches that are sold primarily to institutional investor. They traditionally have a bullet payment with little or no amortization, a maturity of 8 to 9 years, and a spread of +250-325. They are frequently subject to a pricing grid and sometimes carry call premiums/prepayment fees
Institutional Investors
Loan and bond investors who are primarily funded by pooled funds. The funds can take the form of structured vehicles, mutual funds, hedge funds, and pension funds
Intercreditor Agreement
Agreement as to the subordination and priority of repayment to all lenders, senior and subordinated, in the case of default. It applies to lenders across borders and codifies their positions in the absence of intervention from individual bankruptcy courts.
Interest
Payment to lenders for providing funding for a transaction, usually in the form of a spread over a base rate, and an array of fees.
Internal Rate of Return (IRR)
The percentage that represents the level at which the net present value of costs (negative cash flows) of the investment equals the net present value of the benefits (positive cash flows) of the instrument
Investment Bank
Financial institution that provides services such as raising capital by underwriting or acting as agents for clients. Unlike commercial banks, they do not take customer deposits
Investment Considerations
Part of an information memorandum or a bank book. This section typically is utilized as management's sales pitch for the deal
Investment Grade
The credit segment where issuers are rated BBB- or higher
IPO
An issuer lists - or, in the case of a P2P LBO, relists - on an exchange. A portion of the equity proceeds of the listing are typically used to repay some debt and the company can often issue new debt at more favorable terms
Jumbo Loan
Transaction that is greater than $1 billion
Junior Bondholders
The bondholders who are lowest in payment priority
Junior DIPs
Facilities typically provided by bondholders or other unsecured debtors as part of a loan-to-own strategy
Junior Equityholders
The equityholders who are lowest in payment priority, behind preferred shareholders
LBO
Buyouts of a company by a sponsor. Excludes recapitalization, refinancings, and follow-on acquisitions
LCD Flow-Name Composite
A sampling of the loan market consisting of tranches that are widely traded in the secondary market, per LCD's discussion with dealers and investors in the market. A version is compiled for the US market as well as the European market
Lead Arranger/Bookrunner
A league table designation used to indicate the top dog in a syndication
League Table
A ranking of specific metrics for the loan market, for example lead arranger or sponsor
Letter of Credit (LOC)
Guarantees provided by the bank group to pay off debt or obligations if the borrower cannot
Leverage Covenant
A cap on the maximum level of debt, relative to either equity or cash flow, with the total-debt-to-EBITDA level being the most common
Leveraged Lending Guidance (LLG)
Rules put in place by the Federal Reserve Bank, and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency in 2013. These guidelines state that loans that fail to meet credit standards will be deemed criticized or special mention by bank regulators. Bank that either underwrite or hold such loans could face penalties as a result.
Leveraged Loan
A loan that is rated BB+ or lower or is either not rated or rated BBB- or higher but has a spread of LIBOR +125 or higher and is secured by a first- or second- lien. Under this definition, a loan rated BB+ that has a spread of LIBOR +75 would qualify, but a non-rated loan with the same spread would not.
LIBOR Floor
An interest rate floor for a loan's base rate
Liquidity
Measure of how easy it is to sell a loan in the secondary market. Something that is easy to transact is considered liquid. Something that is difficult to transact is considered illiquid.
Loan 100 Index
Short for the S&P/LSTA US Leveraged Loan 100 Index, this Index is designed to reflect the performance of the largest facilities in the leveraged loan market
Loan Commitment
Agreed-upon funded size of a borrowing
Loan Credit Default Swaps (LCDS)
Standard derivatives that have secured loans as reference instruments.
Loan Sydincations & Trade Association (LSTA)
The US trade association representing the leveraged loan markets. The LSTA advances the interests of the asset class through research, documentation, education, and wide-ranging advocacy and support.
Loan-to-Own
A strategy in which lenders - typically hedge funds or distressed investors - provide financing to distressed companies. As part of the deal, lenders receive either a potential ownership stake if the company defaults, or, in the case of a bankrupt company, an explicit equity stake.
LOC Fee
Line of credit fee. The most common - a fee for standby or financial LOCs - guarantees that lenders will support various corporate activities
Local Currency Options
In Europe, facilities can fund in a number of currencies other than the euro, particularly the British pound and the US dollar
London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR)
Standard base rate for calculating interest paid on bank loans. Rate at which banks can borrow from other banks
Loss Given Default
Measures the severity of loss the lender is likely to incur in the event of default. Investors assess this risk based on the collateral (if any) backing the loan
Maintenance Covenants
These pledges are far more restrictive than incurrence covenants, because they require an issuer to meet certain financial tests every quarter, whether or not it takes an action
Managed Accounts
Separately managed investment accounts tailored to the particular requirements of the investor
Mandated Lead Arranger (MLA)
This designation remains the most significant lender title for the banks providing the primary arrangement and initial underwriting, and receiving the majority of fees. Only used in Europe.
Mandatory Prepayments
Certain corporate activities and events trigger a prepayment requirement on leveraged loans. They include excess cash flow, asset sales, debt issuance, and equity issuance.
Mark-to-Market
Mechanism by which loans are valued using available price data (bid/ask levels reported by dealer desks and compiled by mark-to-market services) rather than fair value
Market Technicals
The balance between market supply and market demand. If there are a lot of dollars chasing little product, then issuers will be able to command lower spreads. If, however, the opposite is true, spreads will need to increase for loans to clear the market
Market-Clearing Level
The price or spread at which a deal clears the primary market
Markit LCDX
An index of 100 LCDS obligations that participants can trade. The index provides a straightforward way for participants to take long or short positions on a broad basket of loans, as well as hedge their exposure to the market
Maximum Capital Expenditures
Limitation on the borrower's ability to make capital expenditures
Mergers & Acquisitions
Leveraged finance markets feature corporate mergers and acquisitions or M&A activity. This is where companies seek financing to buy or combine with other companies
Mezzanine
A subordinated instrument that carries second-ranking security or if the capital structure also includes second-lien, third-ranking security
Mezzanine Funds
Investment pools that traditionally have focused on the mezzanine market, providing subordinated debt for buyouts
Middle Market
An issuer with no more than $50 million of EBITDA
Most-Favored-Nation (MFN) Protections
Resets the yield of the existing loan to the rate of the new loan to make sure it remains on market
Most-Favored-Nation (MFN) Sunset
Time period (12 or 18 months) after which the MFN yield protection ends
Multi-Currency Line
Allows the borrower to borrow in one more alternative currencies (in most agreements this option is capped)
Negative Covenants
These agreements limit the borrower's activities in some way. They are highly structured and customized to a borrower's specific condition, and can limit the type and amount of acquisitions and investments, new debt issuance, liens, asset sales, guarantees, etc.
Negative Pledge
Issuers agree not to pledge any assets to new lenders to ensure that the interests of the loan holders are protected
New-Issue Volume
The par amount of paper issued into the primary loan market for any stated time period
Noncore Acquisition
When a corporate issuer sells a division to a private equity firm
Offers Wanted in Competition (OWIC)
A BWIC in reverse. Instead of seeking bids, a dealer is asked to buy a portfolio of paper and solicits potential sellers for the best offer
Original Issue Discount (OID)
A way of remunerating primary lenders, usually institutional investors, by offering them a discount to par. Varies according to demand for the deal
Par
Stated face or nominal value of the underlying instrument, usually expressed as a percentage
Pari Passu
Meaning equal footing. Describes situations where 2 or more assets are equally ranked by seniority without any display of preference
Participation Agreement Sale
Form of secondary sale. The buyer takes a participating interest in the selling lender's commitment in the loan
Payment in Kind (PIK)
A type of debt whose interest payments come in the form of additional debt accrued onto existing debt
Performance Grids
Loan spread adjustments based on one or more financial criteria
Performing Loans
Loans that are not in default
Platform Acquisition
When a private equity group purchases a company in a unique business space in order to make subsequent acquisitions in the same business space. The first acquisition is the platform, with additional purchases to follow
Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece, Spain (PIIGS)
Southern European countries of the eurozone and Ireland
Prepayment Fee
Fees paid by the issuer if the debt is repaid before maturity
Price Talk
The original target spread or spread range launched to the market
Pricing Grid (Margin Ratchet)
A set of financial measures that allows the issuer to pay lower interest on the facilities.
Primary Assignment
Form of secondary sale, in which the agent holds the loan on its books for a short period after the loan closes, and then sells it to the investors. Primarily used by offshore accounts that are subject to certain tax consequences from buying loans in the primary
Primary LBO
A company that is up for sale to private equity sponsors for the first time
Prime Rate
Refers to a bank's prime lending rate. The rate is reset daily, and borrowings may be repaid to any time without penalty. This is typically an overnight option because the prime option is more costly to the borrower than LIBOR
Priming Lien
During the bankruptcy process, DIP lenders may request additional collateral, in the form of a priming lien - a lien that is senior or equal to any preexisting lienholder
Printing a Deal/Linking a Deal
Clearing a deal at a specific price and spread
Private Equity Firm/Financial Sponsor
Company that provides financial backing and makes investments in the private equity of companies
Pro Formal Financials/Financial Models
Detailed model of the issuer's historical, pro forma, and projected financials including management's high, low, and base case for the issuer
Pro Rata
Facilities sold to banks. These tranches generally have a gradual amortization until maturity and maturity of 6 to 7 years. They will usually carry a spread of +200 and greater and might have 2 to 4 stepdowns based on a pricing grid
Public to Private (P2P)
A buyout of a publicly listed company by a private equity firm resulting in its delisting from the stock exchange
Ratings-Based Grids
Adjustment in loan spread based on rating; typical in investment-grade loans
RATS (Rate, Amortization, Term, Security)
Types of changes to an agreement that usually require a full vote of lenders
Recapitalization
Changes in the composition of an entity's balance sheet mix between debt and equity either by issuing debt to pay a dividend or repurchase stock or by selling new equity in some cases to repay debt
Recovery
This is the opposite of loss given default - it is the amount a creditor recovers, rather than loses, in a given default
Refinancing
The issuance of a new loan or bond to refinance existing debt
Relative Value
This can refer to the relative return or spread between various instruments of the same issuer, comparing for instance the loan spread with that of a bond; loans or bonds of issuers that are similarly rated and/or in the same sector, comparing for instance the loan spread of one BB rated healthcare company with that of another; markets, comparing for instance the spread of an offer in the loan market with that of high-yield or corporate bonds. Relative value is a way of uncovering undervalued, or overvalued assets
Reorganization Plan
Debtor's plan upon emerging from bankruptcy for returning to normal business and repaying pre-petition creditors
Repayments
The total par outstanding amount of loans in the S&P/LSTA Leveraged Loan Index paid down in the specified time period
Repricing
An amendment to the change in spread. In a market where spread on new issues are declining, borrowers already in the market will ask lenders to allow them to reduce the existing spread on their loans
Required Lenders Level
Usually just a simple majority used for approval of nonmaterial amendments and waivers or changes affecting one facility within a deal
Rich/Cheap
This is terminology imported from the bond market to the loan market and refers to the investor's perspective. If you refer to a loan as rich, it means it is trading at a spread that is low compared with other similarly rated loans in the same sector, so it can be sold for a gain. Conversely, referring to something as cheap means that it is trading at a spread that is high compared with its peer group. That is, you can buy it on the cheap.
Roll-Up DIPs
Combined pre-petition claims in the DIP facility. In some bankruptcies, DIP providers were given the opportunity to roll up pre-petition claims into junior DIPs that rank ahead of other pre-petition secured lenders
Rollover Equity
Reinvesting funds contributed to the company under previous ownership into a new company under new ownership
Running the Books
Generally the loan arranger is said to be running the books (e.g., preparing documentation, and syndicating and administering the loan)
S&P European Leveraged Loan Index (ELLI)
A market value weighted index based on market weighting, spreads, and interest payments tracking the European loan market
S&P/LSTA Leveraged Loan Index (LLI)
A market value weighted index based on market weighted, spreads and interest payments tracking the US loan market. The LLI is run in partnership between S&P and the LSTA.
Secondary/Tertiary LBO
A secondary LBO (and tertiary LBO) is a sale from one sponsor to another sponsor
Second-Lien Debt (SLD)
Loan that has second priority interest on security. Subordinated to senior loans but senior to mezzanine, high-yield, PIK notes, and equity. They are floating rate-instrument-like senior loans, roughly priced 200-300 bps higher than senior loans. Second-lien are more expensive to prepay than senior debt since many second-liens have prepayment penalties in the first 2 years. Their maturity is usually one-half to one year longer than the TLC.
SLD/EBITDA
Ratio of second-lien debt to EBITDA. Commonly used in financial analysis and covenants
Senior Secured
Generally, the highest ranking instrument in priority of payment
Seniority
Refers to where an instrument ranks in priority of payment. Based on this ranking, an issuer will direct payments with the senior-most creditors paid first and the most junior equityholders last.
Shadow Default Rate
The number of loans to issuers that, over a 12-month period, are paying default interest, in forbearance agreements (lender agreements to reduce or suspend payment requirements for a specified length of time) or represented by restructuring advisors, divided by the number of loans at the beginning of that period
Simple Majority
The basic required lenders level used for approval of nonmaterial amendments and waivers or changes affecting one facility within a deal
Single Security Agreement
Places second-lien lenders in the same creditor class at the first-lien lenders from the standpoint of bankruptcy
Single-Name Total Rate of Return Swaps (TRS)
A way for participants to purchase loans synthetically on margin. A participant buys from a counterparty, usually a dealer the income steam created by a reference test
Soft Call
Premium paid by issuer for early redemption
Soft Fee Premium
This is paid by issuer for early redemption
Speculative Grade
A rating of BB+ or lower on an issuer. It is also considered the leveraged range
Sponsor to Sponsor (S2S)
Deals where one private equity firm sells a portfolio property to another
Spread/Margin
Amount over the base which the loan pays as interest
Spread/Yield to Call (STC/YTC)
The spread/yield to call is the primary spread adjusted for the break price over the stated call terms, usually 3 to 4 years. The secondary spread/yield to call is the current spread adjusted for the current secondary market price over the stated call term
Spread/Yield to Maturity (STM/YTM)
The spread/yield is the primary spread adjusted for the break price over the stated term of the facility. The secondary spread/yield to maturity is the current spread adjusted for the current secondary market price over the remaining term of the loan
Springing Liens/Collateral Release Requirements
Language stating that the borrower must attach or release collateral if the issuer's rating changes. It is primarily attached to borrowers on the cusp of investment grade versus speculative grade
Standstill Agreement
In the case of 2 discrete agreements, divided by a standstill agreement, the first- and second-lien lenders are likely to be divided into 2 creditor classes. Second-lien lenders do not have a voice in the first-lien creditor committees
Staple Financing
A financing agreement stapled onto an acquisition, typically by the M&A advisor. If a private equity firm is working with an investment bank to acquire a property, that bank, or a group of banks, may provide a staple financing to ensure that the firm has the wherewithal to complete the deal. Because of the staple financing provides guidelines on both structure and leverage, it typically forms the basis for the eventual financing that is negotiated by the auction winner and the staple provider will usually serve as one of the arrangers of the financing, along with the lenders that were backing the buyer
Stock Repurchase
When a company uses debt proceeds to buy back stock
Strategic Acquisitions
Acquisitions undertaken by borrowers that are not related to private equity. The borrowers are usually corporations in the same or a related industry segment as the target company.
Structural Flex
An arranger's adjustment of the size of tranches during syndication to reflect current liquidity levels. In highly liquid times, an arranger may move debt from the more expensive tranches to cheaper tranches.
Structured Finance
A complex financial instrument vehicle based upon an underlying pool of assets. For loans, the primary format is the CLO, which securitizes a pool of loans and includes some amount of leverage
Subpar Loan Buyback
Opportunity for issuers with the financial wherewithal and the covenant room to repurchase loans via a tender, or in the open market, at prices below par
Subordinated Bondholders
Debtholders who are ranked below the senior level
Subsidiary Guarantees
Assurances that the assets of subsidiaries are part of the asset pledge, so if an issuer goes into bankruptcy all of its units are on the hook to repay the loan
Supermajority
Share of lenders, typically 67-80%, required for certain material requests such as changes in amortization in term loan repayments and release of collateral. It is a threshold higher than the simple majority level set for the approval of nonmaterial amendments.
Swingline
A small, overnight borrowing line typically provided by the agent
Syndicated Loan
A commercial credit provided by a group of lenders. It is structured, arranged, and administered by one or several commercial or investment banks, known as arrangers.
Syndication Agent
Bank that handles the syndication of the loan
Tangible Net Worth Covenant
Requirement that the borrower maintain a minimum level of tangible net worth (no intangible assets)
Term Loan (TLA, TLB, TLC)
This facility is simply an installment loan, such as a loan one would use to buy a car. The borrower may draw on the loan during a short commitment period and repay it based on either a scheduled series of repayments or a one-time lump-sum payment at maturity. The term loan A is a pro rata facility, structured to meet the requirements of bank investors. The institutional term loans B, C, and higher and are structured to meet the needs of institutional investors
Term Out
This option allows the borrower to convert revolving borrowings into a term loan at a given date.
Terms & Conditions
Preliminary term sheet describing the pricing, structure, collateral, covenants, and other terms of the credit
Total Rate of Return Swap (TRS)
A program under which a participant buys the income stream created by a loan from a counterparty on margin. The participant receives the spread of the loan less the financial cost plus base rate on its collateral account. If the reference loan defaults, the participant is obligated to buy it at par or cash settle the loss based on a mark-to-market or an auction price
Tranche
A layer of debt within a structured vehicle such as CLO or a syndicated loan. The tranches within a single structure may be have different risk and reward profiles. Also known as a facility.
Undertakings for Collective Investment in Transferable Securities (UCITS)
An investment vehicle created through EU regulations. These pooled funds are registered to Europe but can be sold to investors worldwide. They exist because regulations in the UK restrict the marketing of loans directly to retail investors.
Underwriter
Financial institution that commits the funds needed for the transaction and distributes the debt
Underwritten Deals
Transaction in which arrangers guarantee the entire commitment, then syndicate the loan. Some banks use this strategy to win mandates and earn lucrative fees
Unitranche Financings
Single-lender loans, often sliced up behind the scenes
Unsecured
Loans that are not backed by collateral
Upfront Fee/New-Issue Fee
Fee paid by the arranger to lenders joining the syndicate, tiered so that larger commitments earn larger fees
Usage Fee
Fee paid when the utilization of a revolving credit is above a set level or more often below a certain minimum
Voting Rights
The percentage of lenders required to approve amendments or changes to a loan agreement. The levels may vary depending on the type of change (supermajority versus simple majority)
Watch List
Issuers on S&P Global Ratings' credit watch list
Weighted Average Bid
A price at which an investor is willing to buy a loan, weighted by the par amount outstanding. By definition, larger deals will have a stronger influence on the average.
Weighted Average Institutional Spread
Average spread of TLB and TLC tranches weighted by the size of each tranche
Working Capital
Current assets minus current liabilities