Skip to content
Felix
  • Topics
    • My List
    • Felix Guide
    • Asset Management
    • Coding and Data Analysis
      • Data Analysis and Visualization
      • Financial Data Tools
      • Python
      • SQL
    • Credit
      • Credit Analysis
      • Restructuring
    • Financial Literacy Essentials
      • Financial Data Tools
      • Financial Math
      • Foundations of Accounting
    • Industry Specific
      • Banks
      • Chemicals
      • Consumer
      • ESG
      • Insurance
      • Oil and Gas
      • Pharmaceuticals
      • Project Finance
      • Real Estate
      • Renewable Energy
      • Technology
      • Telecoms
    • Introductory Courses
    • Investment Banking
      • Accounting
      • Financial Modeling
      • M&A and Divestitures
      • Private Debt
      • Private Equity
      • Valuation
      • Venture Capital
    • Markets
      • Economics
      • Equity Markets and Derivatives
      • Fixed Income and Derivatives
      • Introduction to Markets
      • Options and Structured Products
      • Other Capital Markets
      • Securities Services
    • Microsoft Office
      • Excel
      • PowerPoint
      • Word & Outlook
    • Professional Skills
      • Career Development
      • Expert Interviews
      • Interview Skills
    • Risk Management
    • Transaction Banking
    • Felix Live
  • Pathways
    • Investment Banking
    • Asset Management
    • Equity Research
    • Sales and Trading
    • Commercial Banking
    • Engineering
    • Operations
    • Private Equity
    • Credit Analysis
    • Restructuring
    • Venture Capital
    • CFA Institute
  • Certified Courses
  • Ask An Instructor
  • Support
  • Log in
  • Topics
    • My List
    • Felix Guide
    • Asset Management
    • Coding and Data Analysis
      • Data Analysis and Visualization
      • Financial Data Tools
      • Python
      • SQL
    • Credit
      • Credit Analysis
      • Restructuring
    • Financial Literacy Essentials
      • Financial Data Tools
      • Financial Math
      • Foundations of Accounting
    • Industry Specific
      • Banks
      • Chemicals
      • Consumer
      • ESG
      • Insurance
      • Oil and Gas
      • Pharmaceuticals
      • Project Finance
      • Real Estate
      • Renewable Energy
      • Technology
      • Telecoms
    • Introductory Courses
    • Investment Banking
      • Accounting
      • Financial Modeling
      • M&A and Divestitures
      • Private Debt
      • Private Equity
      • Valuation
      • Venture Capital
    • Markets
      • Economics
      • Equity Markets and Derivatives
      • Fixed Income and Derivatives
      • Introduction to Markets
      • Options and Structured Products
      • Other Capital Markets
      • Securities Services
    • Microsoft Office
      • Excel
      • PowerPoint
      • Word & Outlook
    • Professional Skills
      • Career Development
      • Expert Interviews
      • Interview Skills
    • Risk Management
    • Transaction Banking
    • Felix Live
  • Pathways
    • Investment Banking
    • Asset Management
    • Equity Research
    • Sales and Trading
    • Commercial Banking
    • Engineering
    • Operations
    • Private Equity
    • Credit Analysis
    • Restructuring
    • Venture Capital
    • CFA Institute
  • Certified Courses
Felix
  • Data
    • Company Analytics
    • My Filing Annotations
    • Market & Industry Data
    • United States
    • Relative Valuation
    • Discount Rate
    • Building Forecasts
    • Capital Structure Analysis
    • Europe
    • Relative Valuation
    • Discount Rate
    • Building Forecasts
    • Capital Structure Analysis
  • Models
  • Account
    • Edit my profile
    • My List
    • Restart Homepage Tour
    • Restart Company Analytics Tour
    • Restart Filings Tour
  • Log in
  • Ask An Instructor
    • Email Our Experts
    • Felix User Guide
    • Contact Support

Debt Products in Private Equity

Review the key debt products in private equity transactions.

Unlock Your Certificate   
 
0% Complete

8 Lessons (44m)

Show lesson playlist
  • Description & Objectives

  • 1. Financing Instruments

    12:43
  • 2. Financing Instruments Tryout

  • 3. Documentation

    09:55
  • 4. Documentation Tryout

  • 5. Financing Consideration Process

    10:37
  • 6. Financing Consideration Process Tryout

  • 7. Credit Committee in Banking

    09:53
  • 8. Credit Committee in Banking Tryout


Prev: Acquisition Finance Debt Capacity Next: Completion Mechanisms

Documentation

  • Notes
  • Questions
  • Transcript
  • 09:55

Understand the documentation requirements for leveraged finance transactions.

Downloads

No associated resources to download.

Glossary

Basket Call Protection cross-default Indenture Leveraged Finance Loan Agreement Loan Contract Loan Market Association Mandatory Prepayment Provisions Restricted Payment Security Agreement Subordination
Back to top
Financial Edge Training

© Financial Edge Training 2025

Topics
Introduction to Finance Accounting Financial Modeling Valuation M&A and Divestitures Private Equity
Venture Capital Project Finance Credit Analysis Transaction Banking Restructuring Capital Markets
Asset Management Risk Management Economics Data Science and System
Request New Content
System Account User Guide Privacy Policy Terms & Conditions Log in
Transcript

Documentation. In this section we will cover the typical agreements for leveraged buyout finance, major agreements, different types of provisions, and key provisions. In leveraged finance transactions documentation is typically prepared by lead banks or their lead councils. For typical corporate lending for investment grade borrowers, documentation may need some negotiation, but it is based on a standard format that is prepared by industry specific organizations such as the LMA, the Loan Market Association in Europe, and LSTA or Loan Syndications in Trading Association in the US, for example. However, in leverage finance that is viewed as a higher risk because of the nature of the transaction, documentation is carefully prepared based on negotiation among a borrower, lenders, and guarantors, et cetera. There are many contracts varying from transaction to transaction. You need to be familiar with at least some of the key agreements here. For bank loans that include revolving credit facilities term loans, A, B, C, or D and other types of loans provided by banks, for example, an asset backed loan facility, generally loan agreement and promissory notes are used. For bond issuance such as high yield bonds, you may see an offering memorandum indentures and notes. An indenture's a contract, and I will explain it further in a later part of this course. Also, apart from general debt, there are other contracts. If a transaction includes mezzanine debt you may need a facility agreement prepared. If a transaction has a unitranche facility, there is an agreement among lenders. Unitranche loans combine first lien and second lean or senior and mezzanine debt that were documented separately historically into a single debt instrument. All the debt should be subject to the same term, but different interest rates. Unitranche loans are becoming more common in the middle cap leverage buyout market. Also, leverage finances secured in most cases so, you need a security agreement. There are so many contracts in the leverage finance market but major contracts are a loan agreement, a bond indenture, and a security agreement. Here you'll become familiar with major contracts most often used in leverage finance regardless of the size of the deal and jurisdiction. For bank loans, there is a contract that is called a loan agreement, a credit agreement, or a facility agreement, et cetera. The name of the contract varies by country or the market. However, the contents have many things in common. In this section, we will call it a loan agreement. It is a binding contract between borrowers and lenders and, in a syndicated loan transaction, there are several lenders listed in a single agreement with a specific title such as lead arranger. Typical terms included in a loan agreement are interest rates, loan maturity, repayment, and covenants. If a transaction needs a high yield bond issuance, a bond indenture has to be prepared. An indenture specifies a coupon rate, bond maturity, covenants, whether it is callable and some special features such as whether it is convertible to equities or not. Lastly, a security agreement is prepared to secure loans or bonds with a sort of collateral or all asset leans, such as first or second. The wording depends on transactions but generally it includes pledge collateral, how to deliver the collateral, and control collateral, et cetera. On this page, I will navigate you through different types of provisions. Provisions are typically documented in a loan agreement or bond indenture based on negotiations among stakeholders such as borrowers and lenders. There are many types of provisions that are used to satisfy both parties by balancing restrictions and permissions of certain kinds of actions. A recent trend in the leverage finance market is a growing number of more flexible and more borrower friendly loan slash bond provisions because of the market where banks and investors rigorously seek a higher return, and leveraged finance is one of their sweet spots. As you can see in this slide there are many types of provisions. These are just examples, and in reality, there are more. Many of the typical provisions are seen in the context of negative covenants including incremental facilities slash lean, negative pledge, reclassification, assignment, investment restriction, payment restriction, incremental facility, et cetera. Negative covenants are generally utilized to protect lenders or bond holders by managing leverage finance related risks. Borrowers also benefit from having appropriate covenants because lenders or investors are willing to offer lower financing costs when having covenants which will reduce the associated risks of the debt. Provisions vary a lot, and different combinations of provisions are included in a transaction depending on the country where the transaction happens or the deal size. Provisions for a large capital deal are somewhat different from those for middle or small cap deals. The next page will introduce some key provisions that you may often see in leverage finance. Mandatory payment, investment restriction, payment restriction, call protection, subordination or liens, cross default and cross acceleration, and change of control. Let's look into specific provisions one by one. First, mandatory prepayment. This is a provision that requires borrowers to prepay some portion of the debt when they get proceeds from events such as asset sales. It is typical in leverage finance and called a cash suite provision as it helps de-leverage and prevents borrowers from spending excess money on things that are not value added. Generally, the payment is applied to term loans first and then applied to a revolving credit facility. The next is restrictions on making investments. It typically prohibits borrowers from making investments unless they get consent from stakeholders. Investments include loans, equity purchases, et cetera. Historically, only a certain amount of investments was allowed but nowadays there are some exceptional cases. For example, those include investments in subsidiaries that are not guarantors for existing claims and investments In short-term securities. Restricted payment provision restricts borrowers from payments for the repurchase of equity, dividend payment, and other types of distributions. In the payment restriction and limited investment, the available amount or a general ratio or builder basket for borrowers have been getting common as the leverage buyout market has become increasingly sponsor friendly. The threshold to excess cash is becoming more common. What is a general basket, builder basket, and ratio basket? A basket is commonly used in the US loan market and it is a specific limit of the amount of money that is allowed to be invested to make payments or distributions to prepay debt, et cetera. Borrowers are getting flexibility on its excess cash. The basket is sometimes determined with a ratio to consolidated basis net income. Which is larger than excess cash flow and is generally used as a term for cash sweep.

Here's some provisions that protect lenders. The first is a call protection provision. It requires borrowers to pay a call premium when repaying debts within a certain period after borrowing money to protect the lenders yield. Call protection is categorized into two types, hard call protection and soft call protection. In a hard call provision, borrowers have to pay a 1 to 3% premium when repurchasing debt without discriminating as to the nature and effect of the subject prepayment. In the soft call provision, borrowers have to pay a 1% premium when refinancing or repricing the current claims. Restrictions on granting lien and security provisions prohibit borrowers from incurring any additional liens and security to protect the current claim's lenders bond holders. However, there are exceptions such as lien securing refinance loans, purchase money liens, et cetera.

The subordination clause is that the current claims shall be prioritized over any other debts to be formed by other contracts in the future. It is to protect the seniority of the current debt and thus protect lenders and bond holders from new lenders rights. The next two provisions are related to the event of default, cross default and cross acceleration provisions. Cross default provision protects lenders to give equal rights when a borrower is in default. When an event of default happens to one type of loan, it automatically triggers an automatic event of default for other loan contracts. Cross acceleration is different from cross default because it triggers in the event of default only when the lender of the defaulted obligation accelerates repayment. The difference is whether the event of default is triggered automatically or not. The cross acceleration clause is often included in bond indentures. The last one is change of control, which is frequently found in a high yield bond and requires borrowers to repurchase the current debts at a certain percentage, typically a 1% premium of their principle in a series of specified change of control events. The definition of change of control has room for negotiation among stakeholders, but generally include events like the acquisition by a third party, a majority change in the company board, or the disposition of subsidiaries.

Content Requests and Questions

You are trying to access premium learning content.

Discover our full catalogue and purchase a course Access all courses with our premium plans or log in to your account
Help

You need an account to contact support.

Create a free account or log in to an existing one

Sorry, you don't have access to that yet!

You are trying to access premium learning content.

Discover our full catalogue and purchase a course Access all courses with our premium plans or log in to your account

You have reached the limit of annotations (10) under our premium subscription. Upgrade to unlock unlimited annotations.

Find out more about our premium plan

You are trying to access content that requires a free account. Sign up or login in seconds!

Create a free account or log in to an existing one

You are trying to access content that requires a premium plan.

Find out more about our premium plan or log in to your account

Only US listed companies are available under our Free and Boost plans. Upgrade to Pro to access over 7,000 global companies across the US, UK, Canada, France, Italy, Germany, Hong Kong and more.

Find out more about our premium plan or log in to your account

A pro account is required for the Excel Add In

Find out more about our premium plan

Congratulations on completing

This field is hidden when viewing the form
Name(Required)
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Rate this course out of 5, where 5 is excellent and 1 is terrible.
Were the stated learning objectives met?(Required)
Were the stated prerequisite requirements appropriate and sufficient?(Required)
Were the program materials, including the qualified assessment, relevant and did they contribute to the achievement of the learning objectives?(Required)
Was the time allotted to the learning activity appropriate?(Required)
Are you happy for us to use your feedback and details in future marketing?(Required)

Thank you for already submitting feedback for this course.

CPE

What is CPE?

CPE stands for Continuing Professional Education, by completing learning activities you earn CPE credits to retain your professional credentials. CPE is required for Certified Public Accountants (CPAs). Financial Edge Training is registered with the National Association of State Boards of Accountancy (NASBA) as a sponsor of continuing professional education on the National Registry of CPE Sponsors.

What are CPE credits?

For self study programs, 1 CPE credit is awarded for every 50 minutes of elearning content, this includes videos, workouts, tryouts, and exams.

CPE Exams

You must complete the CPE exam within 1 year of accessing a related playlist or course to earn CPE credits. To see how long you have left to complete a CPE exam, hover over the locked CPE credits button.

What if I'm not collecting CPE credits?

CPE exams do not count towards your FE certification. You do not need to complete the CPE exam if you are not collecting CPE credits, but you might find it useful for your own revision.


Further Help
  • Felix How to Guide walks you through the key functions and tools of the learning platform.
  • Playlists & Tryouts: Playlists are a collection of videos that teach you a specific skill and are tested with a tryout at the end. A tryout is a quiz that tests your knowledge and understanding of what you have just learned.
  • Exam: If you are collecting CPE points you must pass the relevant CPE exam within 1 year to receive credits.
  • Glossary: A glossary can be found below each video and provides definitions and explanations for terms and concepts. They are organized alphabetically to make it easy for you to find the term you need.
  • Search function: Use the Felix search function on the homepage to find content related to what you want to learn. Find related video content, lessons, and questions people have asked on the topic.
  • Closed Captions & Transcript: Closed captions and transcripts are available on videos. The video transcript can be found next to the closed captions in the video player. The transcript feature allows you to read the transcript of the video and search for key terms within the transcript.
  • Questions: If you have questions about the course content, you will find a section called Ask a Question underneath each video where you can submit questions to our expert instructor team.