---
name: drafting-offering-memoranda-debt
language: en
description: Creates debt offering memoranda with credit overview, financial analysis, industry section, and risk factors for investor marketing. Use when preparing debt OMs, writing credit marketing materials, or structuring lender presentations.
tags:
  - drafting
  - debt-capital-markets
  - risk
  - credit
metadata:
  author: casemark
  practice_areas:
    - DCM
    - Leveraged Finance
    - Debt Origination
  document_types:
    - Draft Document
  skill_modes:
    - Drafting
---
# Drafting Offering Memoranda Debt

## When To Use

- Preparing a confidential offering memorandum (OM) for high-yield bonds, leveraged loans, or private placements
- Creating lender presentation materials for syndicated credit facilities
- Drafting credit marketing packages for refinancings, recapitalizations, or acquisition financings
- Building investor-facing documentation for inaugural or follow-on debt issuances

## Inputs To Gather

- **Issuer/borrower profile**: Legal name, organizational structure, ownership (sponsor/public/private), domicile
- **Transaction terms**: Instrument type (senior secured, senior unsecured, subordinated, mezzanine), tenor, pricing guidance, call protection, covenants summary, security/collateral package
- **Financial data**: 3–5 years of audited financials, LTM figures, pro forma adjustments (acquisition, refinancing, add-backs), capitalization table (pre- and post-transaction)
- **Credit metrics**: Leverage ratios (Total Debt/EBITDA, Senior Secured/EBITDA), interest coverage, fixed charge coverage, free cash flow conversion, liquidity position
- **Industry context**: Market size, growth trends, competitive landscape, regulatory environment, cyclicality drivers
- **Use of proceeds**: Acquisition financing, dividend recapitalization, refinancing existing debt, general corporate purposes
- **Risk factors**: Business-specific, industry, regulatory, financial/structural, market/macro risks
- **Sources & uses table**: Detailed breakdown of funding sources and transaction uses with fees

## Workflow

1. **Confirm transaction parameters** — Verify instrument type, structure, and target investor audience (CLO, institutional, retail). Confirm whether the OM is for 144A/Reg S high-yield, bank loan syndication, or private placement. [VERIFY] applicable securities exemptions and disclosure requirements.

2. **Build the executive summary / investment highlights** — Lead with 4–6 credit strengths: market leadership, margin profile, cash flow stability, asset coverage, sponsor backing, or secular tailwinds. Frame each highlight with supporting data points. This section sells the credit story.

3. **Draft the company overview** — Cover business description, operating segments, revenue mix (by product/geography/customer), history and milestones, and management team bios. Include organizational chart showing guarantor/non-guarantor structure if relevant.

4. **Compose the industry section** — Present TAM/SAM data, growth drivers, competitive dynamics, barriers to entry, and regulatory landscape. Use third-party sources (IBISWorld, Frost & Sullivan, industry associations) and mark unsourced market claims with [VERIFY].

5. **Prepare the financial analysis section**:
   - Historical income statement, balance sheet, and cash flow trends
   - Pro forma adjustments with clear bridge from reported to adjusted EBITDA (cost savings, synergies, run-rate add-backs)
   - Capitalization table showing pre- and post-transaction debt stack with pricing, maturity, and ranking
   - Sources & uses table
   - Credit statistics: leverage, coverage, and liquidity metrics across historical and pro forma periods

6. **Write risk factors** — Organize into categories: business/operational risks, industry/market risks, financial/structural risks, and regulatory/legal risks. Each factor should state the risk, explain the mechanism of harm, and note any mitigant where applicable. [VERIFY] completeness against comparable recent offerings.

7. **Draft structural overview and term summary** — Summarize key terms: ranking, security/collateral, guarantees, covenants (incurrence vs. maintenance), restricted payments baskets, change of control provisions, call schedule, and reporting requirements.

8. **Compile appendices** — Include detailed financial statements, covenant compliance calculations, management biographies, and any third-party reports (appraisals, market studies, environmental).

## Output

A complete debt offering memorandum containing:

- **Cover page** with transaction summary, bookrunner/arranger logos, and confidentiality legend
- **Disclaimer / forward-looking statements notice** — [VERIFY] language against counsel's requirements
- **Table of contents**
- **Executive summary / investment highlights** (2–4 pages)
- **Company overview** (5–10 pages)
- **Industry overview** (3–6 pages)
- **Financial analysis** with pro forma adjustments, capitalization table, and sources & uses (5–10 pages)
- **Risk factors** (5–15 pages depending on complexity)
- **Description of notes / term summary** (3–5 pages)
- **Appendices** with detailed financials and supporting materials

## Quality Checks

- All financial figures tie across sections (executive summary totals match financial analysis detail)
- Pro forma adjustments are individually identified, sourced, and defensible — no "management estimate" without explanation
- Leverage and coverage ratios are calculated consistently (confirm EBITDA definition used: reported vs. adjusted vs. further adjusted)
- Risk factors are specific to the issuer and transaction, not boilerplate — each factor references actual business circumstances
- Sources & uses balance exactly; fees are allocated correctly between OID, upfront, and arrangement fees
- Covenant descriptions match the term sheet or commitment letter; do not paraphrase loosely — [VERIFY] against counsel's draft indenture/credit agreement
- Confidentiality legend and disclaimer language are present on every page or as required
- No stale data: confirm all financial periods, market statistics, and headcount figures reflect the most recent available information
- Formatting is consistent: units (millions/thousands), decimal precision, date conventions, and currency notation uniform throughout
