Chapter 39IMPLEMENTING A DEBT POLICY
Just the right mix
Once a certain level of net debt has been chosen, CFOs should think about the amount, the structuring of the firm's gross debt, the amount of cash that they want to keep, on average, on the asset side of the balance sheet, and the amount of the undrawn available credit facility that they want to keep. But as we'll see with the SEB example, implementing a debt policy goes beyond the simple choice of the parameters of the debt products issued or contracted, and includes the strategy of relationships over time between the firm and its various debt providers.
Section 39.1 DEBT STRUCTURE
Structuring a debt means defining its main parameters and negotiating them with lenders. The most important points are:
- The types of lenders and guarantees:
- should loans be backed up by assets or not;
- should financing be sought on the bond market or on the bank market;
- diversifying risk among lenders (nature and number of lenders);
- choice of a structure:
- choosing a maturity date and an amortisation profile;
- choosing a currency;
- choosing a type of interest rate;
- related terms and conditions:
- defining a hierarchy (seniority) for repayment;
- defining appropriate legal agreements and in particular the covenants to be accepted.
1/ SHOULD LOANS BE BACKED UP BY ASSETS OR NOT?
Lenders wish to ensure that the firm will pay the interest and reimburse the loan. One of the most secure ways of guaranteeing reimbursement is to use one of the ...
Get Corporate Finance, 6th Edition now with the O’Reilly learning platform.
O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.