

“If the debt commitments are really hard-wired here then banks may have to consider delaying debt syndication plans if the market has no appetite for highly levered transactions, so it wouldn’t make sense to come and see us with urgency,” he said.īanks could hold more debt on their books by converting some unsecured debt into second-lien loans, or loans secured by a pledge of collateral, and look to sell a bigger portion of Term Loan A’s (TLA), several high-yield bankers and investors said. Usually, such ratings are sought two to three weeks before a debt sale to give the agencies time, but Begley said a shorter turnaround was possible given his firm gave a Ba2 rating to Twitter when it last issued bonds in February.īegley said the fact that banks had not reached out to them so far could also be a sign they were thinking of holding on to the debt until the markets improve. “If the bank group are looking for a deal to syndicate, they often pursue credit ratings because it acts like a passport to the debt capital markets, but we have not heard from them as yet,” said Begley. Moody’s senior analyst Neil Begley said banks have not yet approached his firm for such ratings. The debt financing package is comprised of leveraged loans, which are risky because of the amount of debt the company is taking on, as well as secured and unsecured bonds.Īny debt sale to a broad investor pool would require credit ratings from the top three rating agencies, Moody’s (NYSE: MCO) Investors Services, S&P and Fitch. “It is currently out of the money for banks and in the money for Musk,” Goss said. Musk would have the upper hand in any talks with the banks. Roberta Goss, head of bank loan and collateralized loan obligations platform for investment manager Pretium Partners, said any financing is “going to be a hard sell” with investors because the amount of debt being put on is almost seven times Twitter’s 2022 expected profits of $2 billion, making it very risky. Musk, however, conditioned his proposal on his ability to secure debt financing and now has until Oct. The debate, currently a topic of conversation among investment bankers and debt investors, provides a window into the havoc wreaked on Wall Street by Musk’s U-turn last week.Īfter engaging in a weeks-long court battle trying to get out of it, Musk abruptly decided he would close on his deal on the original terms. Representatives for Musk and Twitter did not respond to requests for comment. Morgan Stanley, Barclays, MUFG, Bank of America, Societe Generale (OTC: SCGLY), Mizuho and BNP Paribas (OTC: BNPQY) declined to comment. Reuters could not determine whether banks had approached Musk with a proposal.

In that case, Wall Street firms ended up taking a loss of about $700 million after selling $8.55 billion of loans and bonds but averted an even bigger loss by tweaking the package, the market sources and investors said.īut they would need Musk’s signoff for any rejig of the financing structure, and there is no guarantee he would agree, they said.
#The syndicate project twitter software#
Two people familiar with the thinking of the banking syndicate pointed to Wall Street’s experience with the financing provided to fund the buyout of business software company Citrix Systems Inc (NASDAQ:CTXS) as a possible model. That means if banks tried to sell the debt now, they would have to do so at a loss to entice investors to take it off their hands.īanks could, however, try to minimize their losses by increasing the amount of debt that is secured by collateral so that it is less risky, holding a bigger portion of it on their balance sheets, and reducing the amount they have to sell to investors in the near term, according to half a dozen debt capital market bankers and investors. But the terms of the financing were set in April when Musk first made an offer for Twitter and the market for such debt has collapsed since then. Typically, banks would sell the debt to investors and pocket an underwriting fee. Morgan Stanley (NYSE: MS), Bank of America Corp (NYSE: BAC), Barclays (LON: BARC) Plc and Mitsubishi UFJ (NYSE: MUFG) Financial Group Inc led a $13 billion financing for the bid by Musk, the world’s richest man and chief executive of Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) Inc and SpaceX. (Reuters) – Elon Musk’s banks, faced with huge losses on their commitment to finance the $44 billion buyout of Twitter Inc (NYSE: TWTR), may not be able to back out of the deal easily but they might have a way to minimize the hit they take. FILE PHOTO: The logo of Morgan Stanley is seen in New York January 9, 2013.
