Unitranche Debt
Definition
A hybrid lending structure that combines senior and subordinated debt into a single facility with a single blended interest rate, simplifying the capital structure and reducing negotiation complexity. Unitranche facilities are provided by a single lender or lending group and eliminate the need for separate intercreditor agreements between senior and mezzanine lenders. They have become increasingly popular in mid-market leveraged finance, particularly for transactions valued between £20 million and £500 million.
Complementary Terms
Concepts that frequently appear alongside Unitranche Debt in practice.
A hybrid form of financing that sits between senior debt and equity in the capital structure, typically unsecured or subordinated to senior lenders. Mezzanine debt carries higher interest rates than senior debt (often 12-20%) and frequently includes equity kickers such as warrants or conversion rights.
Debt that holds the highest priority claim on specified collateral in the event of default or liquidation, ranking ahead of unsecured and subordinated obligations. Senior secured lenders benefit from security interests over identified assets such as property, equipment, receivables, or intellectual property.
Debt that ranks below senior obligations in priority of repayment in the event of the borrower's liquidation or default. Subordinated debt holders are repaid only after senior secured and senior unsecured creditors have been satisfied in full.
The ratio of net operating income to total debt service obligations (principal plus interest payments) over a given period, measuring a borrower's ability to service its debt from operating cash flow. A DSCR above 1.0x indicates sufficient cash flow to meet debt payments, while lenders typically require a minimum DSCR of 1.2x to 1.5x as a loan covenant.
A form of debt financing available to venture-backed startups that supplements equity financing without requiring the dilution of additional equity rounds. Venture debt is typically structured as term loans with warrants giving the lender the right to purchase equity, and is used to extend runway, finance equipment, or bridge between funding rounds.
The implied cost of future rework caused by choosing a faster, easier, or less thorough solution during software development instead of a better approach that would take longer. Technical debt accumulates interest in the form of increased maintenance costs, reduced development velocity, and higher defect rates.
A hybrid form of capital that combines elements of debt and equity, typically structured as subordinated debt with equity warrants or conversion features. Mezzanine financing is often used in leveraged buyouts, growth capital, and recapitalisations, and sits between senior debt and equity in the capital structure.
A financial metric measuring the proportion of debt in a company's capital structure relative to its earnings, equity, or assets. The most common leverage ratios in corporate finance and lending include net debt to EBITDA, debt to equity, and debt to total assets.
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