---
name: analyzing-liability-management-transactions
language: en
description: Evaluates uptier exchanges, drop-down transactions, and covenant-stripping maneuvers as aggressive liability management tools. Use when analyzing LMTs, evaluating creditor-on-creditor violence, or assessing cooperation agreement strategies.
tags:
  - analysis
  - distressed-and-restructuring
  - credit
metadata:
  author: casemark
  practice_areas:
    - Restructuring
    - Distressed Investing
    - Turnaround
  document_types:
    - Analysis Report
  skill_modes:
    - Analysis
---
# Analyzing Liability Management Transactions

## When To Use

- Evaluating an uptier exchange where a borrower is priming existing lenders by elevating a subset of creditors to super-priority status
- Analyzing a drop-down transaction where assets are transferred to unrestricted subsidiaries beyond the credit group's collateral package
- Assessing covenant-stripping maneuvers that exploit builder baskets, ratio debt capacity, or J.Crew-style trapdoors
- Reviewing cooperation agreements among ad hoc creditor groups forming to participate in or defend against an LMT
- Advising distressed investors on whether to join a participating group or hold out
- Modeling recovery impact on non-participating creditors post-transaction

## Inputs To Gather

- **Credit agreement / indenture**: Full executed document including all amendments and supplements — focus on permitted liens, permitted investments, restricted payments, and asset sale covenants
- **Proposed transaction term sheet or commitment letter**: Structure of the new-money raise, exchange mechanics, and consent thresholds
- **Capital structure snapshot**: Outstanding debt tranches, current trading levels, accrued interest, maturity dates, and any existing intercreditor agreements
- **Cooperation agreement (if available)**: Minimum participation thresholds, milestones, fiduciary outs, and expense reimbursement terms
- **Financial model or projections**: Borrower's liquidity runway, EBITDA trajectory, and enterprise value estimates under base/downside scenarios
- **Relevant litigation filings**: Any pending or threatened adversary proceedings, TROs, or declaratory judgment actions from excluded creditors

## Workflow

1. **Map the covenant architecture**
   - Identify the specific baskets and exceptions the borrower intends to use (e.g., general investment basket, ratio debt incurrence, permitted lien capacity)
   - Trace any daisy-chaining of baskets — determine whether sequential transactions are required to reach the end state
   - Flag whether "Available Amount" or equivalent builder baskets have been drawn down by prior transactions [VERIFY cumulative usage against prior compliance certificates]

2. **Classify the transaction type**
   - **Uptier exchange**: New super-priority debt issued to consenting lenders; non-consenting lenders subordinated in lien priority or payment waterfall
   - **Drop-down**: Designated assets (often IP or key operating subsidiaries) transferred to unrestricted subsidiaries, then used as collateral for new financing outside the existing credit group
   - **Double-dip / sidecar**: Hybrid structures combining elements of both, sometimes with back-to-back intercompany loans to create structural priority
   - Note the consent threshold required and whether the borrower is using open-market purchase provisions, amendment mechanics, or exchange offers

3. **Assess creditor impact**
   - Model recovery waterfalls under (a) current structure and (b) post-LMT structure for each tranche
   - Quantify the dilution or subordination effect on non-participating creditors — express as cents-on-the-dollar recovery shift
   - Identify whether any make-whole, call premium, or prepayment penalty provisions are triggered or circumvented
   - Evaluate whether the transaction constitutes a "Disqualified Assignment" or violates "sacred rights" provisions requiring unanimous consent [VERIFY against specific indenture/credit agreement language]

4. **Evaluate cooperation agreement dynamics**
   - Determine minimum hold thresholds and whether the group has reached blocking position (typically >50% for amendments, >66.67% for exchange offers, or >25% for acceleration)
   - Review standstill and exclusivity windows — how long are members locked up, and what are the fiduciary outs?
   - Assess funding certainty: backstop commitments, expense deposits, and counsel engagement terms
   - Consider holdout incentives — is there a coercive element that penalizes non-participation (e.g., maturity extension for non-consenting lenders)?

5. **Identify litigation risk vectors**
   - Assess exposure to breach-of-contract claims from excluded creditors (e.g., Serta, TriMark, Boardriders litigation patterns) [VERIFY current status of comparable precedent cases]
   - Evaluate fraudulent transfer risk if asset drop-downs occur at below reasonably equivalent value
   - Consider implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing arguments
   - Flag potential equitable subordination risk if controlling creditors are also equity holders or insiders

6. **Synthesize findings and recommendation**
   - Summarize the structural mechanics in a clear transaction diagram (boxes-and-arrows showing entity structure, collateral flow, and priority)
   - State whether the transaction is defensible under the four corners of the credit documents vs. vulnerable to litigation challenge
   - Provide a go/no-go or participate/hold-out recommendation with supporting rationale
   - Identify any open diligence items or ambiguous contract provisions requiring further legal review

## Output

- **Transaction summary**: 1-2 paragraph plain-language description of the LMT mechanics
- **Covenant path analysis**: Step-by-step trace of the contractual provisions enabling the transaction, with specific section references
- **Recovery impact table**: Pre- and post-transaction recovery estimates by tranche (base case and downside)
- **Cooperation agreement assessment** (if applicable): Group composition, blocking position analysis, and lockup terms
- **Litigation risk matrix**: Identified claim theories, estimated strength (strong/moderate/weak), and comparable precedents
- **Recommendation**: Participate, hold out, or seek injunctive relief — with key conditions or contingencies

## Quality Checks

- Every covenant path step cites a specific section number from the credit agreement or indenture — no paraphrased references without pinpoint citation
- Recovery impact calculations show clear assumptions for enterprise value, costs of administration, and priority waterfall mechanics
- Transaction classification matches established market taxonomy (uptier, drop-down, double-dip) rather than ad hoc labels
- Cooperation agreement analysis addresses both offensive (participating group) and defensive (excluded creditor) perspectives
- All jurisdiction-specific legal standards (e.g., governing law of the credit agreement, venue for disputes) are identified and marked [VERIFY] where state law variations matter
- Analysis accounts for any existing intercreditor agreements, subordination agreements, or collateral agency arrangements that may constrain the transaction
