IFR - 07.07.2018

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

Top news


Adjusted Ebitda masks higher leverage


„ Loans Private equity firms pushing boundaries on buyout financings


BY MAX BOWER, DAVID BROOKE


Investors in European leveraged
loans are increasingly worried
THATûPRIVATEûEQUITYûlRMSûAREû
making overly-aggressive
adjustments to portfolio
companies’ earnings to support
higher debt loads.
Ebitda is a benchmark
CASHmOWûlGUREûUSEDûBYûBANKERSû
to calculate a company’s
leverage and market deals to
investors, and adjustments
REmECTûASSUMPTIONSûABOUTû
companies’ future earnings
potential.
But investors are worried that
these adjustments and
projections may not be
achievable and are masking the
true amount of leverage and
DEBTûTHATûPRIVATEûEQUITYûlRMSû
are using, as well as the risk
inherent in transactions.
h'OINGûINTOûTHEûlNANCIALûCRISISû
you saw the same things


HAPPENINGû0RIVATEûEQUITYûlRMSû
have always pushed the
boundaries on what Ebitda they
will get lenders to buy into,“ a
fund manager said.
(IGHERû%BITDAûlGURESûALLOWû
companies to borrow more and
make overall leverage levels
appear lower. Without
adjustments, actual leverage
ratios would be far higher,
which would make deals
DIFlCULTûTOûSELLûTOûINVESTORSûANDû
RAISEûREDûmAGSûWITHûREGULATORS
The European Central Bank
followed US regulators in
capping leverage ratios at six
times Ebitda, but this is a
guideline, and even adjusted
leverage levels are often higher.
A recent €880m equivalent euro
and sterling buyout loan for
pharmaceuticals manufacturer
ZENTIVA had leverage of 7.1 times
based on adjusted 2017 Ebitda.
0RIVATEûEQUITYûlRMSûCITEûLOWERû
average Ebitda levels as the sign

of a healthy market and
routinely use them to
differentiate between current
market conditions and the peak
of the market before 2008’s
lNANCIALûCRISIS
But as resistance to aggressive
loan documents grows, many
investors are now criticising the
scale of current Ebitda
adjustments and are demanding
changes.
Finnish private healthcare
company MEHILAINEN’s €760m
Term Loan B was priced wide of
guidance and required a raft of
changes, including reducing the
adjustments made in the Ebitda
DElNITIONû3EEû,OANSûSECTIONûFORû
more details).
Adjustments linked to the
synergies expected from
mergers and acquisitions have
the best chance of being
achieved, ratings agency
Moody’s said in a June report.
“We’ve worked with one

company where the M&A-
related adjustments have been
very high but the market
accepted them as they have a
track record of delivering,” a co-
HEADûOFûLEVERAGEDûlNANCEûSAID

One-off “add-backs”, where
companies claim a non-recurring
cost saving, are a bigger problem.
/NLYûûOFûTHESEûADJUSTMENTSû
were achieved on average and
nearly 20% of issuers achieved
none of their projected
adjustments, Moody’s said.
These unusual adjustments
are rising, driving the increase in
issuer Ebitda adjustments to an

Discount lingers after Dell’s US$21.7bn


buyout of VMware tracker


„ Equities, Bonds Deal avoids unpopular VMware merger or Dell IPO, but VMware foots the bill


BY ANTHONY HUGHES,
ELEANOR DUNCAN


Privately held IT company DELL
TECHNOLOGIES will simplify its
corporate structure and secure
an NYSE listing by buying out its
VMware tracking stock in a
US$21.7bn cash-and-stock deal,
though doubts linger as to
whether investors will back the
deal.
The deal follows a strategic
review that rejected both a Dell IPO
and a unpopular reverse merger
with VMware, the cloud computing
and virtualisation software provider
in which Dell owns an 81% stake
following its September 2016
merger with EMC.
Intended to track a 53%
economic interest in VMWare,


the tracking stock was created at
the time of the merger so Dell
did not have to pay as much cash
for EMC.
However, the stock has long
TRADEDûATûAûSIGNIlCANTûDISCOUNTû
to the market value of the
underlying VMware shares and
has also underperformed
VMware shares this year.
Dell, privatised by founder
Michael Dell and sponsor Silver
Lake Partners in a 2013 deal that
lumbered the company with
more than US$50bn of debt, is
offering VMware tracking stock
holders Class C shares in Dell or
US$109 a share in cash, the
latter a 29% premium to pre-deal
levels.
The cash component is
limited to US$9bn of the

consideration and is funded
by Dell taking its pro rata
share of a US$11bn special
dividend VMware has agreed
to pay alongside the deal.
VMware would therefore
remain an independent
entity without being saddled
with Dell’s debt load as it
would have been in a merger
scenario, though the special
dividend drains VMware
of nearly all of its spare
cash.
There is “a continued risk
that Dell could attempt to
transfer further amounts of
VMware cash upstream in
the event that additional
liquidity is required”, credit
ratings agency Moody’s said in a
statement.

APPROVAL NEEDED
Assuming the transaction is
approved by the holders of the
tracking stock, Dell would list its
shares on the NYSE in the fourth
quarter of this year.
!CCORDINGûTOûCOMPANYûlGURES û
tracking stock holders would
emerge with 21%–31% of Dell
(depending on how many take
cash), diluting Michael Dell to
nûFROMûûPREVIOUSLYû
and Silver Lake to 16%–18% from

Silver Lake has promised not
to sell its stake for 180 days after
the transaction closes. This helps
ensure its stake is not viewed as
an overhang when Dell lists on
the NYSE, though Silver Lake is
expected to look to sell at some
point.

“Private equity firms
have always pushed
the boundaries on
what Ebitda they will
get lenders to buy into“
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