Danielle Fugazy

Mrs. Fugazy is a contributing editor at Mergers & Acquisitions Journal. Prior to joining the publication, she served as the editor of Buyouts Magazine.


Sign up today and take advantage of member-only content — the kind of timely, cutting edge industry insight that only TheMiddleMarket.com can deliver.
  • Mergers & Acquisitions Daily and M&A Financing Report, our free email news alerts
  • Expert M&A and Private Equity Blogs
  • Industry White Papers

Where's the Debt?

At first glance, the announcement of Norwest Equity Partners’ acquisition of Shock Doctor last week looked like a run-of-the-mill transaction. However, upon closer inspection, I discovered the Norwest/Shock Doctor deal was anything but routine. The deal was financed exclusively through Norwest’s working capital line, Norwest’s equity and through Shock Doctor’s management team, which means no term or mezzanine funding was involved. In a recent interview with Avram Davis, a writer for MergersUnleashed, Norwest Principal Todd Solow explained, “We wanted to be able to provide certainty to close to the client, and this was the best way to do it.”

To be sure, the Norwest acquisition isn’t the first deal of its kind, and the market has seen some larger players get creative with their financing and deal terms, including the recent WL Ross deal to purchase H&R Block unit Option One Mortgage Corp. for about $1.1 billion outright. The transaction is expected to close by May 30. However, Norwest’s Shock Doctor deals is one of the few deals in the middle market that I have seen close without financing terms. As credit markets continue to remain tight, I suspect we will see more and more of these deals taking place.

Closing deals with little to no financing definitely changes the landscape. Private equity firms now have to make certain they are buying companies with strong but achievable growth projections, which will mean certain sectors will come into favor while others fall out of favor. Also, without financing terms there is little to no room for error. That said, with financing tight and PE firms still having to put cash to work, you can expect to see more of these deals.

Recent Posts

In Defense of Canada

I'm not quite sure why, but there's been a lot of Canada bashing lately.

Scale for the Sake of Scale

Are boards and compensation committees unwittingly incentivizing empire-building among CEOs?

Are Club Deals Back?

The SkillSoft buyout seems to reflect the coziness that probably concerns regulators about consortiums.

Rollups are Back

Middle market firms never really discarded the strategy, but the mega firms, specifically KKR and Blackstone, are turning to rollups as a way to put money to work.

Index of Posts

0 Comments

Be the first to comment on this post using the section below.

Add Your Comments...

Already Registered?

If you have already registered to Money Management Executive, please use the form below to login. When completed you will immeditely be directed to post a comment.

Forgot your password?

Not Registered?

You must be registered to post a comment. Click here to register.