No "Financing Out" Required: KKR's Equity Financing of the Sum-Total Merger

Following our post earlier today in which we reviewed KKR's break-up fees and the "go shop" and "no shop" provisions in the KKR-Sum Total merger agreement, we now examine the absence of a “financing out” in the agreement.

No Financing Out
In private equity buyouts, the acquisition vehicle tends to be a shell holding company with no assets. At the closing of highly leveraged cash-for-stock mergers, the holding company is funded by an equity investment from the funds participating in the merger and by senior and mezzanine, or “bridge,” loans from a syndicate of banks. Upon receipt, the holding company immediately transfers these funds to the target company for distribution to the target’s shareholders to complete the merger.   (The movement of these funds as they’re wired from entity to entity is mapped out in painstaking detail beforehand by the accounting firms in a chart dubbed the “funds flow.”) 

Although private equity firms usually have obtained signed letters from the banks committing their funds to the transaction before they enter into a merger agreement, firms always face the danger that, at some point between signing the merger agreement and closing, their lenders renege on their financing commitments or increase the costs of borrowing. To protect themselves against the possible loss of debt financing on acceptable terms, private equity funds in years past have negotiated a “financing out” in merger agreements by setting the continued availability of financing from their bank syndicates as a condition to closing the deal. 

The merger agreement does not have a “financing out” for KKR because the firm is financing the Sum Total merger solely with an equity investment from Accel-KKR Fund III, L.P., a fund dedicated to investing in mid-market technology companies. With no fear of a third-party’s failure to make good on its loan promises, KKR faces very little risk that it will not be able to come up with the cash to complete the transaction. 

Guarantee from KKR Fund

In fact, it is Sum Total who bears some risk that the KKR fund may fail to contribute cash to the shell holding company serving as KKR’s merger vehicle. The merger agreement gives Sum Total additional comfort by having the right to force the merger vehicle to compel the KKR fund to finance the purchase price. Sum Total also has a direct guarantee from Accel-KKR Fund III, L.P. for the holding company’s (and its subsidiary’s) obligations under the merger agreement. In effect, Sum Total’s contractual right to force the KKR fund to finance the transaction serves as an alternative, extra-judicial means of enforcing its right to specific performance under the agreement.

Sum Total’s right to specific performance will be the subject of our third and final post on the deal protection terms in the KKR-Sum Total merger agreement.

Closing Conditions

In private equity transactions, the most important thing that needs to happen before a closing occurs is the buyer needs to raise the financing needed to pay the seller the cash portion of the purchase price. Sometimes this is stated as an express condition, meaning that if financing cannot be obtained, the private equity firm will not be in breach of the agreement. If it is not an express condition, then the private equity firm will be in breach of contract if the financing cannot be raised. But because the private equity firm generally forms a special purpose entity for the sole purpose of completing the acquisition, there isn’t a company against which seller can assert a claim. For this reason, even where financing is not stated as an express condition, as a practical matter there is a financing condition in most private equity transactions.

Smart sellers sometimes require that a buyer provide firm financing commitments from equity and debt sources before a binding purchase agreement is signed. Alternately, sellers may demand that the buyer place cash in escrow that becomes forfeit in case financing is not raised by a stipulated date.

Buyer’s obligation to complete the purchase of the business is subject to the fulfillment of a number of standard conditions. These conditions may include further due diligence in case certain matters are left for review after the contract is signed. The more conditions loaded into the contract, the less the contract is a firmly binding agreement. Some contracts can have so many conditions and due diligence requirements that they amount to no more than an option to purchase the company. 

The standard closing conditions are as follows:

Continued Truth of Warranties.  The representations and warranties of seller in the purchase agreement must continue to be true and correct in all material respects. In essence, seller must reiterate the representations at the time of the closing.

Performance of Covenants. Seller must perform in all material respects all covenants and obligations and comply with all conditions required by the purchase agreement to be performed or complied with prior to the closing date.

Material Adverse Effect. No event, occurrence or circumstance shall have happened that has had or could reasonably be expected to have a material adverse effect on the business or prospects of the business. This section gives buyer one last chance to cancel the transaction if something material and unexpected happens to the seller between signing the purchase agreement and the closing.

Permits and Consents. Seller must obtain all of the consents, approvals and clearances that it’s required to get before the closing, such as third party consents under contracts that require such consents in order to be assigned.

No Litigation. There must not be any litigation or proceeding pending or threatened to restrain or invalidate the sale and purchase of the business. Such proceedings might include a governmental antitrust action or securities law matter.

Authorization. All corporate action necessary to authorize the execution, delivery and performance by seller of the purchase agreement, and the consummation of the transactions contemplated thereby, must have been duly and validly taken by seller. This is generally performed even before the agreement is signed, although sometimes shareholder approvals are not obtained until after the agreement is signed.