1 / 35

Capital Structure

Capital Structure. Joseph V. Rizzi Amsterdam Institute of Finance June, 2010. Minsky. Hedge Finance Speculative Finance Ponzi Finance Fantasy Finance. Amsterdam Institute of Finance June, 2010. Approaches To Credit Analysis. Cash Flow Impacts default risk Balance Sheet

hayden
Download Presentation

Capital Structure

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Capital Structure Joseph V. Rizzi Amsterdam Institute of Finance June, 2010

  2. Minsky • Hedge Finance • Speculative Finance • Ponzi Finance • Fantasy Finance Amsterdam Institute of Finance June, 2010

  3. Amsterdam Institute of Finance June, 2010

  4. Approaches To Credit Analysis • Cash Flow • Impacts default risk • Balance Sheet • Determines Loss in Event of Default (LIED) • Liquidity • Valuation Amsterdam Institute of Finance June, 2010 4

  5. Credit Analysis • Business Risk: EBITDA Volatility • Industry Characteristics • Firm Characteristics • Financial Risk: EBITDA Relative to Debt • Structural Risk • Issues • Priority of claim on assets and income • Control • Focus • Covenants, Seniority, Security Amsterdam Institute of Finance June, 2010

  6. Credit Screening – Subject to market availability • Quantitative • Capitalization • Cash Equity >25% • Total Debt <6.0x • Senior Debt (1) <4.5x • First Lien <4.0x • Second Lien <0.5x • Cash Flow • LTM EBITDA / PFI >2:1 • 7 x LTM FFOCF / TLA(2) >1:1 • Liquidity • Cash + MS + RCA / P+I (3) > 1.5 : 1 1:- TLA usually >20% of senior debt and amortizes at least 30% by year 5 2:- FFOCF = LTM EBITDA - (WCI + CAPEX + Taxes + PF Interest) 3:- Liquidity tested day 1. MS (Marketable Securities). RCA (Revolving Credit Availability). Revolver usually set at 1 x EBITDA Amsterdam Institute of Finance June, 2010

  7. Debt Capacity Considerations • Debt capacity is derived from firm’s assets • Operating Cash Flows • Asset Sales / Asset Quality • Leveragability • Market Conditions • Target financing structure 2H07Crisis Credit curve shifts over time depending on the economy Rates Overheated 1H07 Rating Amsterdam Institute of Finance June, 2010

  8. Capitalization Alternatives • There are two different approaches to designing the capital structure: Balance Sheet Model Cash Flow Model 3 - 4x EBITDA 50% 4 - 6x EBITDA 30% Senior Debt Sub Debt Equity Equity 20% Amsterdam Institute of Finance June, 2010

  9. Approaches to Determining Debt Capacity • Ratio Approach • Cash Flow • Advance Rate Amsterdam Institute of Finance June, 2010

  10. Ratio Approach Market • Maximum senior debt and total debt ratios • Vary over cycle Peers • Identify • Rating Classification • Key Ratios Rating Agencies • Credit Statistics Amsterdam Institute of Finance June, 2010

  11. Peer Comparison Amsterdam Institute of Finance June, 2010

  12. Rating Agencies Amsterdam Institute of Finance June, 2010 • Important: Loan Market Evolution from a bank to an institutional market (back to a bank market?) • Impact: Majority of syndicated loans are rated • Pricing: Affected by rating

  13. Euro Credit Transformation: European LBO market transformed during 202-2007 from conservative cash flow based largely bank funded (OTD) originate to rated distribute market funded by non bank CLO demand. Credit Quality: Ratings mitigration - 2002 – 75% B+/B or higher 2010 – 59% B – or lower Amsterdam Institute of Finance June, 2010

  14. Amsterdam Institute of Finance June , 2010

  15. U.S. LARGE LBOsPPX – FDX Relationship PPXFDX 1998 7.9 5.4 1999 7.23 4.7 2000 6.07 4.2 2001 5.81 4.1 2002 6.44 4.0 2003 7.0 4.6 2004 6.92 4.8 2005 8.16 5.25 2006 8.15 5.43 2007 9.51 6.23 2008 9.15 4.9 2009 7.43 4.0 10YTD 8.13 4.37 Amsterdam Institute of Finance June, 2010

  16. Amsterdam Institute of Finance June , 2010

  17. Cash Flow • Maximum debt capacity formula:- MDC = f(operations, amortization, rate, asset sales) MDC = [EBIT / (i+ 1/n)] + AS + RF EBIT - Earnings Before Interest and Taxes i - Interest Rate n - Straight line loan amortization AS - Proceeds from Asset Sales RF - Refinancing Amsterdam Institute of Finance June, 2010

  18. Credibility of Cash Flow Projections • Issues • Adjustments (beware of solving for cash flows to justify price) • Normalization • Cyclicality • Bad Management • Value Test • Projections implied price • Reverse Engineer - Management implied forecast • Firms • Peers • Tie Into • Compensation • Covenants Amsterdam Institute of Finance June, 2010

  19. In Practice • Macro/Market Level • Determine rating target • Use target rating level financial characteristics • Funded Debt/EBITDA • EBITDA/Interest Expense • Funded Debt/Total Cap Example: (A) Target Rating BB (B) EBITDA/Int for Target Rating c3.0x (C) Firm EBITDA $300mln (D) Interest Rate for Target Rating 10% (E) Maximum Debt Capacity = (C/B)/D = (300/3)/10% = $1,000 Amsterdam Institute of Finance June, 2010

  20. Amsterdam Institute of Finance June, 2010

  21. European Insolvency Regimes Source S&P Amsterdam Institute of Finance June, 2010

  22. Sponsored Deals • Tend to default at same rate as similarly rated non sponsored firms • Larger deals tend to have worse performance • PE underwriting performance varies Firm Defaulted and Distressed Deals (D&D) (%) Cerberus 4(67%) Apollo 13 (65%) TH Lee 6 (55%) Carlyle 16(52%) Bain 10(45%) Goldman 8(38%) Warburg 5(36%) Providence 4(33%) TPG 6(32%) Welsh 4(31%) JPM 2(29%) Blackstone 6(27%) Madison 3(25%0 KKR 3(15%) Source: Moody’s Amsterdam Institute of Finance June, 2010

  23. Bankruptcy Legal Framework (1) • Initiation of Bankruptcy • Who has the right to file for bankruptcy? • What kinds of enterprises should be eligible to file for bankruptcy? • Can the decision to file be challenged? • When should inappropriate cases be terminated? • Preserving Firm Value / Minimizing Business Losses in Bankruptcy • Should the business be reorganized or liquidated? • How should creditors be prevented from dismembering the business? • Should the debtor be required to honor pre-bankruptcy contracts with suppliers and lenders? • Should debtor-in possession (DIP) financing be made available? Amsterdam Institute of Finance June, 2010

  24. Bankruptcy Legal Framework (2) • Corporate Governance in Bankruptcy • Should the debtor’s decision making authority be limited? • How should debtor management be monitored? • Choosing the Plan of Reorganization • Should the process be consensual or formulaic? • Who has the right to propose a plan? • How should the plan be voted upon? • How should dissenting claimholders be treated? • Should there be a time limit? • How should the debtor’s new capital structure be determined? Amsterdam Institute of Finance June, 2010

  25. Restructuring ASSETS LIABILITIES + EQUITY Equilibrium ASSETS LIABILITIES + EQUITY Restructure Amsterdam Institute of Finance June, 2010

  26. Building Blocks of A Reorganization Plan • How Big is the pie? • Valuation of LHS • How much does each claimholder receive? • RHS waterfall analysis • Legal System • How should this consideration be paid? • Cash • Instruments • How much debt can the company support after a reorganization? • - Debt capacity Amsterdam Institute of Finance June, 2010

  27. Conclusion • Determining debt capacity using credit analysis • Expanding debt capacity • What to expect when you exceed debt capacity Amsterdam Institute of Finance June, 2010

  28. Lyondell Banks Lose $3.7B in loans - $20.9B Goldman - $850 ABN Amros/RBS - £1B write-off on $3.4B claim UBS - $500 Out of Season – 2H07/1H07 Amsterdam Institute of Finance June, 2010

  29. Purchase Price 20% Premium to 7/16/07 closing price Commodity Basell/Blavatnik and Lyondell – Russian Rule DIP – Debt converted into post petition financing Amsterdam Institute of Finance June, 2010

  30. Amsterdam Institute of Finance June, 2010

  31. Amsterdam Institute of Finance June, 2010

  32. Amsterdam Institute of Finance June, 2010

  33. Amsterdam Institute of Finance June, 2010

  34. Amsterdam Institute of Finance June, 2010

  35. Disclosure This information has been prepared solely for informational purposes and is not intended to provide or should not be relied upon for accounting, legal, tax, or investment advice. The factual statements herein have been taken from sources believed to be reliable, but such statements are made without any representation as to accuracy or completeness. Opinions expressed are current opinions as of the date appearing in this material only. These materials are subject to change, completion, or amendment from time to time without notice and CapGen Financial is not under any obligation to keep you advise of such changes. All views expressed in this presentation are those of the presenter, and not necessarily those of CapGen Financial. Amsterdam Institute of Finance June, 2010

More Related