This is creating the most challenging conditions for European private equity deal-making in years.
Twelve months ago, the availability of financing was barely given a second thought; sponsors had optionality, costs were low and packages could be arranged at speed.
Financing discussions front-loaded in deal process
Today, debt is having to be put in place by deal teams before many of their investment committees will even entertain a bid.
Earn-outs, vendor loans and rollovers (i.e. where sellers invest a portion of their equity in the PE-controlled acquisition company) are increasingly common as sponsors look to reduce the sums they need to pay.
Without easy access to syndicated debt due to increased risk aversion among banks and weak demand from investors, sponsors are in daily discussions with private credit funds as they look to secure financing.
A clear opportunity exists for direct lenders – awash with capital – to develop strong future pipelines if they can build mutually beneficial relationships.
One area where these dynamics are less significant is in the ESG space. Here, it’s potentially easier to justify a higher equity contribution where the focus of a fund’s limited partners is on social and environmental impact rather than pure financial returns.
More broadly, we also don’t expect the gloomy backdrop to prevail throughout the whole of 2023. The leveraged market is exactly that – a market – and history shows that when it comes back it will be with a bang.