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In today’s edition, we look at firms that borrowed against the promise of runaway growth that didn’t͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌ 
 
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April 30, 2024
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Business

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Liz Hoffman
Liz Hoffman

Hi, and welcome back to Semafor Business.

The world of lending is in the middle of its biggest reordering since the creation of the mortgage bond in the 1960s. Hundreds of billions of dollars of loans have moved out of banks over the past decade and into their lightly regulated, clubby cousins — private credit funds and insurers. With them has swung wealth and power on Wall Street, and the source of what-ifs in Washington, which succeeded in its goal of making banks safer after 2008, but now has less visibility into where that risk went.

Today, a canary in the coal mine: A new type of loan, doled out by these private funds in the late 2010s and early 2020s, is aging badly. It replaced a bedrock of millennia of lending — cash flow is king — with a Silicon Valley embrace of top-line growth that never translated into bottom-line profits. This loose thread won’t unravel the entire sweater, but it’s a reminder that the assumptions underlying this new breed of corporate lending hasn’t been pressure-tested yet.

Plus, Big Tech dividends and the problems with Israel divestment.

Buy/Sell

➚ BUY: Heavy hands: Chinese officials hinted at a more interventionist stance to tackle the country’s housing glut and economic drag, and Japanese banks are dumping dollars and buying yen — likely at the behest of the Bank of Japan, which had until now watched its currency tumble from the sidelines.

➘ SELL: Empty suits: HSBC and Paramount are both without a CEO today. Noel Quinn unexpectedly stepped down from the global bank, leaving an unnamed successor with a messy China portfolio. And Bob Bakish finally lost a power struggle with Shari Redstone as the studio giant tries to get a messy merger back on the rails.

Thilo Schmuelgen/Reuters
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The Tape

Fed to signal it’s holding firm… UnitedHealth exec stock sales under fire… Euro zone ekes out growth… Macron rescues a crown jewel… Sundar Pichai is almost a billionaire… Walmart closes its clinics… CZ may become richest federal inmate today…

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Liz Hoffman

Risky tech loans on the clock

THE SCENE

Money-losing tech companies borrowed billions of dollars against the promise of runaway growth from lenders with looser standards. The bill is now coming due.

Loans based on revenue, rather than on profits, were the voguish financial products of 2021 and 2022, on top of the hand-over-first venture capital unleashed by the pandemic. Private credit funds eager to put their money piles to work replaced a bedrock of lending — cash flow is king — with a Silicon Valley embrace of quick growth, sticky subscriptions, and roaring stock markets.

These loans based on “annualized recurring revenue,” or ARR, generally carried tripwires that required borrowers to turn a profit within two or three years or risk a default that could tip them into bankruptcy. Lenders assumed companies would keep growing and that debt would stay cheap and plentiful. Worst-case scenario, an IPO market that seemed to take all comers would bring in fresh cash to repay them.

None of those things happened.

Rising interest rates have made these loans more expensive, at the same time that tech-company growth has stalled out. IPO markets that shut in 2022 haven’t reopened, leaving companies relying on private money that’s stuck in its own pencils-down funk.

“There’s no easy answer” except for companies to cut costs quickly, Holden Spaht, an executive at Thoma Bravo, one of ARR loans’ most enthusiastic users, wrote last year on LinkedIn.

With the clocks on those loans now expiring, lenders are adding more time for companies to repay, rather than sully a track record that’s been pretty clean so far. Private-equity owners are quietly putting in new cash to shore up money-losing companies.

“In 2021, everyone was a ‘have,’” said Elizabeth Tabas Carson, a partner at Sidley Austin. “Now lenders have a lot of ‘have-nots.’”

More than $1 trillion has gone into private credit funds since 2019, according to the IMF. With so much money chasing borrowers, terms got looser. Firms started out offering to lend companies $1 or $2 for every dollar of recurring revenue — usually software subscriptions — but by 2022, that was closer to $4, said Ben Rubin, a partner at Proskauer who specializes in private credit deals.

KNOW MORE

Like many standards of financial prudence, the idea that only profitable companies could handle debt started to go out of fashion in the 2010s. Startups like Uber needed more cash to push into new markets. And because they had been private for so long, they had largely exhausted equity investors in Silicon Valley, who didn’t want their stakes to be diluted even further. Borrowing solved both problems.

It was a profitable strategy for lenders too: A 2018 study found the 10-year returns for venture debt were slightly better than those of venture equity, turning the risk vs. reward calculus in Silicon Valley on its head.

Traditional underwriting standards held on as long as they could, and as recently as 2021, a credit analyst at S&P could call ARR lending a “platypus… so rarely seen that most people know little about it.”

But what started as a small club of lenders willing to lend to unprofitable companies grew quickly, and by the early 2020s, two dozen firms were in the business.

“It used to be if the five players said no, that deal didn’t happen,” said Rubin, who estimates ARR loans are about 5% of private-credit financing deals Proskauer does. “But if the next five say yes, suddenly it does. That’s not to say it’s a bad asset, but there’s probably more risk in the system.”

At the end of 2019, Thoma Bravo turned heads with the largest ever such loan, $825 million to finance the buyout of an online learning-software company. Two years later, Thoma Bravo and Vista took out $2.5 billion-plus ARR loans to buy two tech companies, Anaplan and Avalara, that had never turned an annual profit.

LIZ’S VIEW

The rise of ARR loans are entirely a function of the private, nonbank lenders and the ocean of money they’ve raised. No bank would lend an unprofitable company four times its annual revenue, at least not for long. (One extremely predictable exception: Silicon Valley Bank had a pretty good business doing these loans.) An executive at Thoma Bravo admitted as much last year: “If we want to do deals that are ARR loans,” Erwin Mock told Nikkei, “we have to do it in the private debt market.”

That’s not necessarily a problem, and there are plenty of reasons why a loan that makes sense inside a private credit fund, whose money is locked up for eight years, doesn’t make sense inside a bank that funds itself with deposits that might vanish tomorrow.

But the big question hanging over that $1 trillion that’s come into private lenders in the past five years is how it will fare in a downturn. “We haven’t tested it yet,” Goldman Sachs President John Waldron told me recently. “We don’t really have visibility into it, we don’t really understand the quality of it.”

Executives at Blue Owl or Apollo or Ares point to their conservative leverage and comfy perch at the top of the capital stack, with millions of dollars of loss-taking stockholders and junior creditors below them. That’s all true and makes even seasoned bears pretty sanguine about the rise of private credit.

But underwriting models are only as good as the assumptions that go into them, and the assumptions behind ARR loans have turned out to be flawed. What’s more, those flaws have become obvious without a major economic cycle. All it took was corporate buyers of expense-management and hiring software to pull back a bit and IPO investors to sit on their hands for a year.

Read how loose the terms of these loans became, including "ARR for life." →

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Evidence

The great “decoupling debate” is like the parable about the blind men and the elephant: It looks different depending on what part of it you see. Direct trade between China and the US, for example, is falling, but a lot of it is going indirect, routed through countries like Vietnam and Thailand. “If you want to make the supply chain shorter, you first need to make it longer,” Maersk CEO Vincent Clerc told me a few weeks ago, when I interviewed him in Hong Kong.

But the global economy is becoming less knitted in other ways, new data out from the UN show. For decades, trade, GDP, and cross-border investment — companies building factories, buying each other’s financial instruments, and the like — grew in lockstep. The trend started in the 1990s, as common currencies and economic blocs like Europe and post-Soviet Russia were being established and China was welcoming global investment.

Those trendlines started to diverge in the early 2010s, as a debt crisis hit the euro zone and trade tiffs flared, and have zoomed apart since the pandemic.

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What We’re Tracking

Income bracket: Amazon reports earnings after the bell today and Wall Street is watching for a dividend announcement. Meta and Alphabet both said this year that they’d start sharing their cash piles with shareholders, leaving Amazon and Tesla as the only members of the Magnificent 7 without a dividend. Even Nvidia has been paying one for a decade.

Tech stocks have long been growth stocks, held because they go up not for any hopes of income (dividends) or value (earnings potential). “Welcome to the value table, Silicon Valley,” I wrote last year, as tech companies started a round of belt-tightening, prodded along by activist investors. There are seats at the income table, too.

Drive-by: Goldman Sachs is in talks to offload its General Motors credit card to Barclays, WSJ reports. The bank won the cobranded deal in 2020 (over Barclays) by selling GM on a futuristic vision of its cars as e-commerce hubs that could handle gas payments and drive-through orders — features it turns out few consumers want, either from GM or from Goldman Sachs, which is returning to its Wall Street roots.

Fatih Aktas/Anadolu via Getty Images

Divestment thesis: A top demand of campus protesters at Columbia and elsewhere is that their schools sell their investments in Israeli companies or Western companies doing business there. One problem is that private universities don’t disclose that level of detail about their endowments, and have so far resisted student pressure to start. The bigger problem, as WSJ’s James Mackintosh writes today, is that it won’t work.

Similar boycotts of apartheid-aligned companies in the 1990s were more focused on companies in South Africa, and aimed at consumers, not investors. The target list for Gaza protesters includes Hewlett Packard and Hyundai. Endowments, even Columbia’s $13.6 billion pot, aren’t big enough to matter. And across the ideological aisle from any university action are wealthy, largely Jewish donors ready to step in, as Bill Ackman did in January when he bought a stake in Tel Aviv’s stock exchange.

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