JPMorgan's EA Debt Isn't the End for Private Credit

JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s $20 billion debt commitment for the record-breaking buyout of Electronic Arts Inc. is classic leveraged financing, which might seem surprising in a world overrun with private credit. But the boom in alternative lenders and banks’ drive to compete still plays a role – it’s why JPMorgan has a safety net in its own $50 billion direct lending pool if there are any troubles offloading the gaming company’s debt later. Private credit can be banks’ friend as well as foe.

Most major investment banks now have access to private credit funds, either in-house like JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs Group Inc., or through partnerships with other managers like those formed by Citigroup Inc. or Barclays Plc. The EA buyout highlights banks’ ability to blend or switch between private and syndicated loans when pitching for takeovers. Having both sources close at hand should help big lenders avoid getting stuck with unwanted risky loans as several did after Elon Musk’s ill-fated acquisition of Twitter Inc. It will still have to work for the borrower rather than mainly being a way to clear a bank's books.

Takeovers that rely on big debt packages have historically been funded by a short-term loan from a group of banks, known as a bridge, which is then refinanced through bond issues in public markets, or junk-rated loans that are popular among specific loan funds and US retail investors. Since the 2008 global financial crisis, a new kind of long-term private lending fund has taken root and in recent years bloomed into a major source of buyout financing. Such funds now have about $1.7 trillion in assets.

EA’s $55 billion take private announced Monday supersedes the $45 billion record-buyout of electricity utility TXU in 2007. While the price tag then was more than 80% debt and a thin sliver of equity, the EA deal is almost the reverse. The $36 billion cash being put up by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, Silver Lake Management and Jared Kushner’s Affinity Partners, accounts for 65% of the deal’s value — and so is a very healthy cushion for the financing.

The debt will be risky though: After a $2 billion short-term working capital facility, the rest of the $18 billion in debt is at least 7.5-times EA’s earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization over the past 12 months, according to a banker familiar with the deal. In comparison, the total value including equity in the TXU deal was only slightly higher at about 8.5-times Ebitda — add the equity into the EA deal and the multiple rises to more than 20 times. One comfort to EA’s lenders is that the business has produced consistently high free cash flow of between $1.7 billion and $2 billion over five of the past six years, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.