---
name: analyzing-credit-facility-amendments
language: en
description: Evaluates amendment and waiver requests with consent requirements, fee structures, and modified term impact analysis. Use when analyzing amendments, structuring consent solicitations, or evaluating covenant relief requests.
tags:
  - analysis
  - debt-capital-markets
metadata:
  author: casemark
  practice_areas:
    - DCM
    - Leveraged Finance
    - Debt Origination
  document_types:
    - Analysis Report
  skill_modes:
    - Analysis
---
# Analyzing Credit Facility Amendments

## When To Use

- Borrower or sponsor requests a covenant waiver, amendment, or consent under an existing credit agreement
- Evaluating whether a proposed amendment requires Required Lender, Super-Majority, or unanimous lender consent
- Structuring consent solicitation mechanics including fee levels, deadlines, and minimum participation thresholds
- Assessing the downstream impact of modified terms on pricing, collateral coverage, or maturity profile
- Comparing amendment terms against market precedent for similar credit profiles

## Inputs To Gather

- **Existing credit agreement** — full executed version plus any prior amendments, waivers, or consent letters
- **Proposed amendment or waiver request** — term sheet, blackline, or borrower counsel markup
- **Consent threshold provisions** — the specific voting and consent mechanics from the credit agreement (typically Section 9 or 10)
- **Current lender syndicate list** — holders, commitment amounts, and pro rata shares
- **Borrower financials** — most recent compliance certificate, quarterly financials, and covenant calculation worksheets
- **Fee proposal** — consent fee, amendment fee, and any ticking fee or early-bird incentive structure
- **Market comparables** — recent amendment transactions in the same sector, rating tier, or leverage band

## Workflow

1. **Map consent requirements** — Identify which provisions are being amended and classify each change by the consent threshold it triggers (Required Lenders, Super-Majority, Affected Lenders, or all Lenders). Flag any "sacred rights" requiring unanimous consent (maturity extensions, rate reductions, release of all/substantially all collateral or guarantors, pro rata sharing changes). [VERIFY: Confirm exact consent thresholds and sacred-right definitions in the governing credit agreement, as these vary by deal.]

2. **Analyze the amendment substance** — For each proposed change, determine:
   - **Covenant modifications**: Is the borrower seeking a holiday, reset, or permanent step-up? Calculate the incremental headroom at current and projected run-rate EBITDA.
   - **Pricing changes**: Spread adjustments, floor changes, OID or upfront fees that effectively re-price the facility. Compute yield-to-maturity or yield-to-worst impact.
   - **Maturity/amortization changes**: Extensions, amortization deferrals, or repayment schedule modifications. Model cash flow impact on the lender group.
   - **Basket and permission changes**: Increases to permitted debt, lien, investment, or restricted payment baskets. Assess incremental leakage risk.

3. **Evaluate consent solicitation mechanics** — Review the proposed timeline (launch date, early-bird deadline, expiration), minimum participation thresholds, conditions to effectiveness, and any "rollover" or "cashless roll" provisions for extending lenders. Flag if the timeline is aggressive relative to market norms (typically 10–20 business days).

4. **Benchmark fees against market** — Compare proposed consent/amendment fees to recent precedent transactions. Typical consent fees range from 5–25 bps for routine amendments; covenant relief or maturity extensions in stressed situations can command 25–100+ bps. Note whether fees compensate adequately for the concession granted.

5. **Assess credit impact** — Model the post-amendment credit profile: adjusted leverage, coverage ratios, liquidity runway, and collateral coverage. Identify whether the amendment materially weakens lender protections or merely provides temporary operational flexibility with a clear path to compliance.

6. **Flag structural risks** — Identify non-pro-rata treatment, potential for lender-on-lender violence through liability management provisions, any "J. Crew" or "Chewy" style trapdoor risks in the amended basket language, and whether the amendment facilitates future priming transactions.

## Output

Produce a structured amendment analysis containing:

- **Executive summary** — One-paragraph overview of the amendment request, key terms, and recommendation
- **Consent threshold matrix** — Table mapping each proposed change to its required consent level
- **Term comparison table** — Side-by-side of existing vs. proposed terms for each modified provision
- **Fee benchmarking** — Comparison of proposed fees to 3–5 comparable recent amendments
- **Credit impact analysis** — Pre- and post-amendment leverage, coverage, and liquidity metrics
- **Risk flags** — Enumerated list of structural, credit, or documentation concerns
- **Recommendation** — Consent/reject/negotiate position with specific counter-proposal points if applicable

## Quality Checks

- Confirm every modified provision is correctly mapped to its consent threshold — misclassification can invalidate the entire amendment
- Verify that financial covenant calculations use the same definitions (e.g., Consolidated EBITDA with applicable add-backs) as the credit agreement, not management-adjusted figures
- Ensure fee analysis accounts for the full economic package (consent fee + any spread increase + OID) rather than headline consent fee alone
- Check that the amendment does not inadvertently trigger cross-default or event-of-default provisions under other debt instruments in the capital structure
- Confirm that "Required Lender" threshold calculations exclude defaulting lenders and, where applicable, sponsor-affiliated holdings [VERIFY: Treatment of affiliated lender holdings varies by credit agreement]
- Validate that maturity extension amendments do not create a "Maturity Wall" conflict with other tranches or violate any inside-maturity restrictions on refinancing debt baskets
