Defaults and Remedies in Senior Loan Agreements

The purpose of having the financial and affirmative and negative covenants in senior loan agreement becomes clear in the Defaults section of the agreement. It’s here that they get their teeth. 

Defaults

The first events of default are non-payment of principal or interest. There is generally no grace period for principal payments. Interest payments are usually given a short grace period of five days. After that, nonpayment results in immediate default of the entire loan.

Another category of defaults occur if any representation made by borrower proves to have been incorrect in any material respect at the time it was made. This is a static test, looking only at the representation on the date it was made and asking if it was true or false in all material respects on that date. The limitation to material issues is intended to rule out minor inaccuracies as a cause of loan defaults.  What constitutes materiality is not usually defined in much detail.

After nonpayment, the most important defaults are those involving covenants. These are not static events. Covenants apply to the activities of the borrower throughout the life of the loan. Failure to comply with a covenant can result in the default of the entire loan agreement, even if the borrower is current in its payment obligations. A covenant default is therefore a powerful tool in the hands of the lender, and lenders frequently use covenant defaults to impose additional restrictions on a borrower or even to accelerate repayment of the loan.

Covenant defaults usually have a cure period. The borrower is given a chance to correct the default before it becomes a reason to accelerate the loan. Covenant defaults are sometimes classified in two groups: those that have short cure periods, such as five days of less, and those that have longer cure periods, usually thirty days. The shorter cure periods are reserved for those important covenants that can’t be readily corrected, such as the delivery of an incorrect financial statement. The longer periods are reserved for the things that can be corrected with proper diligence, such as compliance with laws, removing liens from properties and delivering compliance certificates.

A special class of defaults is reserved for bankruptcy and insolvency. These generally trigger immediate default of the credit agreements.

Remedies

Once a default has occurred and the borrower has run out of time to correct it (if such a right exists) the lender has the ability to accelerate the loan and demand that all amounts due under the loan be repaid immediately. Any obligation of the lender to continue extending credit under a revolving credit facility is canceled. If the borrower fails to immediately prepay the loan, as is generally the case once a default occurs, the lender is then free to exercise the security instruments and liens it carefully acquired when the loan was made. Also at this time the defaulted loan begins to bear a higher, default interest rate.  

Trackbacks (0) Links to blogs that reference this article Trackback URL
http://www.privateequitylawreview.com/admin/trackback/25722
Comments (0) Read through and enter the discussion with the form at the end
Post A Comment / Question Use this form to add a comment to this entry.







Remember personal info?
Send To A Friend Use this form to send this entry to a friend via email.