- Parker Hudson Welcomes Grace Blood, John David Gifford, and Madison Morrow to the Partnership
- Deal Activity Slows for Asset-Based Lending, but Portfolio Performance Stays Strong
- Exploring the Future of Supply Chain Finance: Insights from SFNet's Inaugural Conference
- Navigating 2025: SFNet’s Asset-Based Capital Conference Returns to Las Vegas with Premier Insights and Networking
- Siena Lending Group Announces Leadership Transition Plan
-
PPPLF Update and Summary
On April 30, 2020, the Federal Reserve announced that it is expanding eligibility to participate in the Federal Reserve’s Paycheck Protection Program Liquidity Facility (the “PPPLF”) to all lenders eligible to originate Paycheck Protection Program loans.[1] The PPPLF permits eligible PPP lenders to pledge PPP loan notes to the Federal Reserve in exchange for a low interest, non-recourse loan from the Federal Reserve in the amount of the pledged PPP loan note.
Program Update
When originally announced, the PPPLF was only available to PPP lenders that are depository institutions. Now, all PPP lenders approved by the SBA, including banks, credit unions, Community Development Financial Institutions, members of the Farm Credit System, small business lending companies licensed by the SBA, and some financial technology firms, are eligible to participate in the PPPLF.
-
Twin River Secures $275 Million Of Additional Financing
Twin River Worldwide Holdings, Inc. (NYSE: TRWH) announced today that it had successfully syndicated an expansion to the term loan facility in its existing bank credit agreement by $275 million. Funding, which is expected to occur on May 11, 2020, is subject to final documentation and customary conditions.
Borrowings under the expanded term loan facility will bear interest at LIBOR + 8.00% per annum through the 2026 maturity date. The loan will be issued with an original issue discount of 97 and will be non-callable for 18 months. After 18 months the loan is callable at a price of 104.5% of par, and after 30 months the loan is callable at par.
-
SFNet 2019 Annual Factoring Survey Analysis
The data in this Annual Factoring Industry Survey presents results from a period that now seems like a distant memory. Sitting down to write commentary was very challenging. Commenting on the past year seemed moot; and attempting to correlate or speculate on the future of our industry seems a fools’ errand.
One thing to keep in mind is that receivables factoring is a an “all-seasons competitor” in the world of finance. Factoring is a product that has been around for hundreds, if not thousands, of years, and so I am confident that it, like our economy, will weather the current stormy global conditions stemming from the pandemic. In fact, it is more likely that the industry will grow and thrive during this time of stress and uncertainty. The very design and nature of accounts receivable factoring is ideally suited for providing liquidity to businesses in times of financial, operational stress and uneven cash flow.
-
Managing C&I Risk in a Time of Pandemic
Commercial lenders will face many new and unique challenges over the coming months as the full effects of the coronavirus pandemic are felt throughout the economy. For commercial customers cash flow, liquidity, and credit tightening dramatically across industries is the new normal. In these uncertain times, no segment of the bank commercial portfolio is under as much short- and long-term risk as the commercial and industrial (C&I) line of credit segment.
-
Small Bank Loan Growth Jumps as PPP Funding Ramps Up
Commercial loan growth reaccelerated across much of the U.S. banking industry as lenders began to fund federally backed small business loans and prepared to start processing a second round of applications under the coronavirus relief program.
Excluding the 25 largest institutions by assets, commercial and industrial loans increased 6.3% during the week ended April 15, according to seasonally adjusted data in the Federal Reserve's most recent H.8 report on commercial banks. That represents a huge jump from growth rates of 0.6% to 0.8% in the preceding two weeks, and leapfrogs growth of 2.1% to 2.3% during two weeks in March when corporate draws against bank credit lines were particularly heavy.
-
Aftermath
Aftermath means the consequences or aftereffects of a significant unpleasant event, like Covid-19. The financial system is going to experience this first-hand. No firm, whether it be bank or non-bank, will be left unscathed. The author is purposely writing this article now in order to predict that one of the many untold stories will be that the nation’s biggest banks were expecting the unexpected as it pertains to their middle-market C&I and ABL portfolios. Clearly, no bank in the country could have imagined a complete shutdown based on a virus, but what they could and did imagine was a severe depression irrespective of the cause. Not only were they expecting, but they were prepared in unexpected ways. The same cannot be said for certain community and regional banks and BDCs, which might not have had the resources, scale or wherewithal to prepare.
-
North Mill Capital Provides $15 Million Accounts Receivable Factoring Facility
North Mill Capital announced it provided a $15,000,000 accounts receivable factoring facility to provider of oral and personal hygiene products.
The funds were used to pay off the previous lender and provide additional working capital to support the Company's growth. NMC also entered into an inter-creditor agreement with a purchase order financing partner to help meet substantial near-term growth needs.
-
Reaching the Top: C-Suite Women in Secured Finance Roundtable
What does it take to break the proverbial glass ceiling in secured finance? What does the journey to the “top” look like for women in financial services? We interviewed four C-Suite women and here is what they had to say. The women we spoke with are Meredith Carter, president and CEO, Context Business Lending; Miin Chen, COO, Siena Lending Group; Deborah Monosson, president & CEO, Boston Financial & Equity Corporation; and Jennifer Yount, partner, Paul Hastings LLP.
-
Women Leaders Talk About Advancing in the Ranks
Secured Finance executives and an executive recruiter discuss how the industry can attract and retain more women.
-
CARES Act Amendment Summary
On Tuesday, April 21, the Senate passed an amendment to the CARES Act that, among other things, would amend certain provisions of the Paycheck Protection Program (“PPP”), economic injury disaster loans, and emergency grants. The amendment is expected to pass the House later this week and the president has indicated he would sign it. In some ways, the amendment is as notable for some of the things it did not do – it did not create eligibility for financial services firms including community banks and secured lenders to borrow PPP loans, and it did not include rumored restrictions on larger borrower’s access to PPP – as it is for what it did do (increase funding and create a set-aside of PPP guarantees for PPP loans made by certain small and community development lenders).
-
Tips For Working From Home
New to working from home? Check out a few quick tips from ENGS Commercial Finance to help transition from working in-office to working at home.
-
Get to (Really) Know Rob Meyers
The following interview is a transcript from SFNet YoPro Committee member Avi Levine interviewing Rob Meyers, president, CCO & managing member of Republic Business Credit, in April 2020. Rob previously served as chair of SFNet's National Young Professionals Committee and spearheaded the YoPro Annual Leadership Summit, now in its third year. We hope you enjoy getting to know the industry’s young professionals.
-
Meet YoPro Andrew Bertolina
The following interview is a transcript from SFNet YoPro Committee member Matt Gillman, interviewing Andrew Bertolina of Finvoice in late 2019. We hope you enjoy getting to know the industry’s young professionals.
-
Henry Schein Enhances Liquidity Position With New Credit Facility Totaling $700 Million
Henry Schein, Inc. (Nasdaq: HSIC), the world’s largest provider of health care solutions to office-based dental and medical professionals, today announced that it has closed on a new credit facility totaling $700 million, with JP Morgan Securities LLC and U.S. Bank NA serving as Joint Lead Arrangers.
The new facility represents $700 million in committed financing that increases and replaces $200 million in uncommitted financing from the same lenders. The Company’s liquidity position now totals $1.7 billion.
-
Transformational Change and Crisis Costs Weigh Heavily on Both Sides in Stressed and Distressed Retail/Supplier Relationships
Ben Nortman and Ian Fredericks of ReStore Capital examine the financial burden that consumer mandated transformation and the current crisis are imposing on both retailers and their suppliers, and how innovative financial solutions can be leveraged by both to help ensure successful outcomes in stressed and distressed environments.
-
Second Avenue Capital Partners Provides a $17 Million Senior Secured Credit Facility to Crown & Caliber
Second Avenue Capital Partners, LLC (“SACP”) (www.secondavecp.com) announced it has closed on a $17,000,000 senior secured credit facility to Crown & Caliber, an online marketplace leader in authenticated pre-owned luxury watches. The credit facility will be used to support growth opportunities and provide additional working capital.
Founded in 2013 in Atlanta, GA, Crown & Caliber has created an accessible, transparent, and trusted e-commerce platform to buy and sell pre-owned watches. -
Interview with Jennifer Palmer
In January, Gerber Finance announced the completion of its CEO succession strategy, naming longtime president Jennifer Palmer as CEO with Founder Gerald Joseph transitioning to his new role as strategic advisor and chairman of the board.
-
Wingspire Capital Provides $40.0 Million Senior Secured Loan to Save-A-Lot
Wingspire Capital Holdings (“Wingspire”) today announced that it has provided a $40.0 million senior secured loan to Moran Foods, LLC d/b/a Save-A-Lot. (“Sav-A-Lot”). Wingspire’s loan was part of a $150.0 million revolving line of credit among a group of three lenders. Loan proceeds were used to repay existing debt and support Save-A-Lot’s operations and acceleration of its transformation plan.
-
SFNet Responds to Main Street Lending Program Guidance
In a letter to Treasury Secretary Steven T. Mnuchin and Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome H. Powell, SFNet CEO Rich Gumbrecht provided recommendations to help facilitate the objectives of the newly introduced Main Street Expanded and New Loan Facilities as set out by the Federal Reserve. Given that many of the potentially eligible borrowers who would benefit from the Programs have existing collateralized debt, SFNet reasoned that it is critical that the Programs specifically address the relationship between existing secured loans and the additional loans provided for in the Programs. The inability to do so would “limit access to this critical source of capital, imperiling jobs and jeopardizing economic recovery”. The benefit of clarifying and amending these protections would “mitigate the current economic hardship being experienced by [Main Street companies] and bolster this critical part of the capital supply chain”. SFNet further positioned that non-depository lenders should be eligible lenders to maximize the benefit of the Programs.
Click here to view the letter.
-
New UK Insolvency Legislation and its Potential Impact on the Asset-Based Lending Industry: The New Moratorium
Richard Hawkins, CEO of Atlantic RMS, considers the implications of the UK government's latest announcement and its impact on asset-based lending to UK business.
-
PPPLF Update and Summary
On April 30, 2020, the Federal Reserve announced that it is expanding eligibility to participate in the Federal Reserve’s Paycheck Protection Program Liquidity Facility (the “PPPLF”) to all lenders eligible to originate Paycheck Protection Program loans.[1] The PPPLF permits eligible PPP lenders to pledge PPP loan notes to the Federal Reserve in exchange for a low interest, non-recourse loan from the Federal Reserve in the amount of the pledged PPP loan note.
Program Update
When originally announced, the PPPLF was only available to PPP lenders that are depository institutions. Now, all PPP lenders approved by the SBA, including banks, credit unions, Community Development Financial Institutions, members of the Farm Credit System, small business lending companies licensed by the SBA, and some financial technology firms, are eligible to participate in the PPPLF.
-
Twin River Secures $275 Million Of Additional Financing
Twin River Worldwide Holdings, Inc. (NYSE: TRWH) announced today that it had successfully syndicated an expansion to the term loan facility in its existing bank credit agreement by $275 million. Funding, which is expected to occur on May 11, 2020, is subject to final documentation and customary conditions.
Borrowings under the expanded term loan facility will bear interest at LIBOR + 8.00% per annum through the 2026 maturity date. The loan will be issued with an original issue discount of 97 and will be non-callable for 18 months. After 18 months the loan is callable at a price of 104.5% of par, and after 30 months the loan is callable at par.
-
SFNet 2019 Annual Factoring Survey Analysis
The data in this Annual Factoring Industry Survey presents results from a period that now seems like a distant memory. Sitting down to write commentary was very challenging. Commenting on the past year seemed moot; and attempting to correlate or speculate on the future of our industry seems a fools’ errand.
One thing to keep in mind is that receivables factoring is a an “all-seasons competitor” in the world of finance. Factoring is a product that has been around for hundreds, if not thousands, of years, and so I am confident that it, like our economy, will weather the current stormy global conditions stemming from the pandemic. In fact, it is more likely that the industry will grow and thrive during this time of stress and uncertainty. The very design and nature of accounts receivable factoring is ideally suited for providing liquidity to businesses in times of financial, operational stress and uneven cash flow.
-
Managing C&I Risk in a Time of Pandemic
Commercial lenders will face many new and unique challenges over the coming months as the full effects of the coronavirus pandemic are felt throughout the economy. For commercial customers cash flow, liquidity, and credit tightening dramatically across industries is the new normal. In these uncertain times, no segment of the bank commercial portfolio is under as much short- and long-term risk as the commercial and industrial (C&I) line of credit segment.
-
Small Bank Loan Growth Jumps as PPP Funding Ramps Up
Commercial loan growth reaccelerated across much of the U.S. banking industry as lenders began to fund federally backed small business loans and prepared to start processing a second round of applications under the coronavirus relief program.
Excluding the 25 largest institutions by assets, commercial and industrial loans increased 6.3% during the week ended April 15, according to seasonally adjusted data in the Federal Reserve's most recent H.8 report on commercial banks. That represents a huge jump from growth rates of 0.6% to 0.8% in the preceding two weeks, and leapfrogs growth of 2.1% to 2.3% during two weeks in March when corporate draws against bank credit lines were particularly heavy.
-
Aftermath
Aftermath means the consequences or aftereffects of a significant unpleasant event, like Covid-19. The financial system is going to experience this first-hand. No firm, whether it be bank or non-bank, will be left unscathed. The author is purposely writing this article now in order to predict that one of the many untold stories will be that the nation’s biggest banks were expecting the unexpected as it pertains to their middle-market C&I and ABL portfolios. Clearly, no bank in the country could have imagined a complete shutdown based on a virus, but what they could and did imagine was a severe depression irrespective of the cause. Not only were they expecting, but they were prepared in unexpected ways. The same cannot be said for certain community and regional banks and BDCs, which might not have had the resources, scale or wherewithal to prepare.
-
North Mill Capital Provides $15 Million Accounts Receivable Factoring Facility
North Mill Capital announced it provided a $15,000,000 accounts receivable factoring facility to provider of oral and personal hygiene products.
The funds were used to pay off the previous lender and provide additional working capital to support the Company's growth. NMC also entered into an inter-creditor agreement with a purchase order financing partner to help meet substantial near-term growth needs.
-
Reaching the Top: C-Suite Women in Secured Finance Roundtable
What does it take to break the proverbial glass ceiling in secured finance? What does the journey to the “top” look like for women in financial services? We interviewed four C-Suite women and here is what they had to say. The women we spoke with are Meredith Carter, president and CEO, Context Business Lending; Miin Chen, COO, Siena Lending Group; Deborah Monosson, president & CEO, Boston Financial & Equity Corporation; and Jennifer Yount, partner, Paul Hastings LLP.
-
Women Leaders Talk About Advancing in the Ranks
Secured Finance executives and an executive recruiter discuss how the industry can attract and retain more women.
-
CARES Act Amendment Summary
On Tuesday, April 21, the Senate passed an amendment to the CARES Act that, among other things, would amend certain provisions of the Paycheck Protection Program (“PPP”), economic injury disaster loans, and emergency grants. The amendment is expected to pass the House later this week and the president has indicated he would sign it. In some ways, the amendment is as notable for some of the things it did not do – it did not create eligibility for financial services firms including community banks and secured lenders to borrow PPP loans, and it did not include rumored restrictions on larger borrower’s access to PPP – as it is for what it did do (increase funding and create a set-aside of PPP guarantees for PPP loans made by certain small and community development lenders).
-
Tips For Working From Home
New to working from home? Check out a few quick tips from ENGS Commercial Finance to help transition from working in-office to working at home.
-
Get to (Really) Know Rob Meyers
The following interview is a transcript from SFNet YoPro Committee member Avi Levine interviewing Rob Meyers, president, CCO & managing member of Republic Business Credit, in April 2020. Rob previously served as chair of SFNet's National Young Professionals Committee and spearheaded the YoPro Annual Leadership Summit, now in its third year. We hope you enjoy getting to know the industry’s young professionals.
-
Meet YoPro Andrew Bertolina
The following interview is a transcript from SFNet YoPro Committee member Matt Gillman, interviewing Andrew Bertolina of Finvoice in late 2019. We hope you enjoy getting to know the industry’s young professionals.
-
Henry Schein Enhances Liquidity Position With New Credit Facility Totaling $700 Million
Henry Schein, Inc. (Nasdaq: HSIC), the world’s largest provider of health care solutions to office-based dental and medical professionals, today announced that it has closed on a new credit facility totaling $700 million, with JP Morgan Securities LLC and U.S. Bank NA serving as Joint Lead Arrangers.
The new facility represents $700 million in committed financing that increases and replaces $200 million in uncommitted financing from the same lenders. The Company’s liquidity position now totals $1.7 billion.
-
Transformational Change and Crisis Costs Weigh Heavily on Both Sides in Stressed and Distressed Retail/Supplier Relationships
Ben Nortman and Ian Fredericks of ReStore Capital examine the financial burden that consumer mandated transformation and the current crisis are imposing on both retailers and their suppliers, and how innovative financial solutions can be leveraged by both to help ensure successful outcomes in stressed and distressed environments.
-
Second Avenue Capital Partners Provides a $17 Million Senior Secured Credit Facility to Crown & Caliber
Second Avenue Capital Partners, LLC (“SACP”) (www.secondavecp.com) announced it has closed on a $17,000,000 senior secured credit facility to Crown & Caliber, an online marketplace leader in authenticated pre-owned luxury watches. The credit facility will be used to support growth opportunities and provide additional working capital.
Founded in 2013 in Atlanta, GA, Crown & Caliber has created an accessible, transparent, and trusted e-commerce platform to buy and sell pre-owned watches. -
Interview with Jennifer Palmer
In January, Gerber Finance announced the completion of its CEO succession strategy, naming longtime president Jennifer Palmer as CEO with Founder Gerald Joseph transitioning to his new role as strategic advisor and chairman of the board.
-
Wingspire Capital Provides $40.0 Million Senior Secured Loan to Save-A-Lot
Wingspire Capital Holdings (“Wingspire”) today announced that it has provided a $40.0 million senior secured loan to Moran Foods, LLC d/b/a Save-A-Lot. (“Sav-A-Lot”). Wingspire’s loan was part of a $150.0 million revolving line of credit among a group of three lenders. Loan proceeds were used to repay existing debt and support Save-A-Lot’s operations and acceleration of its transformation plan.
-
SFNet Responds to Main Street Lending Program Guidance
In a letter to Treasury Secretary Steven T. Mnuchin and Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome H. Powell, SFNet CEO Rich Gumbrecht provided recommendations to help facilitate the objectives of the newly introduced Main Street Expanded and New Loan Facilities as set out by the Federal Reserve. Given that many of the potentially eligible borrowers who would benefit from the Programs have existing collateralized debt, SFNet reasoned that it is critical that the Programs specifically address the relationship between existing secured loans and the additional loans provided for in the Programs. The inability to do so would “limit access to this critical source of capital, imperiling jobs and jeopardizing economic recovery”. The benefit of clarifying and amending these protections would “mitigate the current economic hardship being experienced by [Main Street companies] and bolster this critical part of the capital supply chain”. SFNet further positioned that non-depository lenders should be eligible lenders to maximize the benefit of the Programs.
Click here to view the letter.
-
New UK Insolvency Legislation and its Potential Impact on the Asset-Based Lending Industry: The New Moratorium
Richard Hawkins, CEO of Atlantic RMS, considers the implications of the UK government's latest announcement and its impact on asset-based lending to UK business.
-
PPPLF Update and Summary
On April 30, 2020, the Federal Reserve announced that it is expanding eligibility to participate in the Federal Reserve’s Paycheck Protection Program Liquidity Facility (the “PPPLF”) to all lenders eligible to originate Paycheck Protection Program loans.[1] The PPPLF permits eligible PPP lenders to pledge PPP loan notes to the Federal Reserve in exchange for a low interest, non-recourse loan from the Federal Reserve in the amount of the pledged PPP loan note.
Program Update
When originally announced, the PPPLF was only available to PPP lenders that are depository institutions. Now, all PPP lenders approved by the SBA, including banks, credit unions, Community Development Financial Institutions, members of the Farm Credit System, small business lending companies licensed by the SBA, and some financial technology firms, are eligible to participate in the PPPLF.
-
Twin River Secures $275 Million Of Additional Financing
Twin River Worldwide Holdings, Inc. (NYSE: TRWH) announced today that it had successfully syndicated an expansion to the term loan facility in its existing bank credit agreement by $275 million. Funding, which is expected to occur on May 11, 2020, is subject to final documentation and customary conditions.
Borrowings under the expanded term loan facility will bear interest at LIBOR + 8.00% per annum through the 2026 maturity date. The loan will be issued with an original issue discount of 97 and will be non-callable for 18 months. After 18 months the loan is callable at a price of 104.5% of par, and after 30 months the loan is callable at par.
-
SFNet 2019 Annual Factoring Survey Analysis
The data in this Annual Factoring Industry Survey presents results from a period that now seems like a distant memory. Sitting down to write commentary was very challenging. Commenting on the past year seemed moot; and attempting to correlate or speculate on the future of our industry seems a fools’ errand.
One thing to keep in mind is that receivables factoring is a an “all-seasons competitor” in the world of finance. Factoring is a product that has been around for hundreds, if not thousands, of years, and so I am confident that it, like our economy, will weather the current stormy global conditions stemming from the pandemic. In fact, it is more likely that the industry will grow and thrive during this time of stress and uncertainty. The very design and nature of accounts receivable factoring is ideally suited for providing liquidity to businesses in times of financial, operational stress and uneven cash flow.
-
Managing C&I Risk in a Time of Pandemic
Commercial lenders will face many new and unique challenges over the coming months as the full effects of the coronavirus pandemic are felt throughout the economy. For commercial customers cash flow, liquidity, and credit tightening dramatically across industries is the new normal. In these uncertain times, no segment of the bank commercial portfolio is under as much short- and long-term risk as the commercial and industrial (C&I) line of credit segment.
-
Small Bank Loan Growth Jumps as PPP Funding Ramps Up
Commercial loan growth reaccelerated across much of the U.S. banking industry as lenders began to fund federally backed small business loans and prepared to start processing a second round of applications under the coronavirus relief program.
Excluding the 25 largest institutions by assets, commercial and industrial loans increased 6.3% during the week ended April 15, according to seasonally adjusted data in the Federal Reserve's most recent H.8 report on commercial banks. That represents a huge jump from growth rates of 0.6% to 0.8% in the preceding two weeks, and leapfrogs growth of 2.1% to 2.3% during two weeks in March when corporate draws against bank credit lines were particularly heavy.
-
Aftermath
Aftermath means the consequences or aftereffects of a significant unpleasant event, like Covid-19. The financial system is going to experience this first-hand. No firm, whether it be bank or non-bank, will be left unscathed. The author is purposely writing this article now in order to predict that one of the many untold stories will be that the nation’s biggest banks were expecting the unexpected as it pertains to their middle-market C&I and ABL portfolios. Clearly, no bank in the country could have imagined a complete shutdown based on a virus, but what they could and did imagine was a severe depression irrespective of the cause. Not only were they expecting, but they were prepared in unexpected ways. The same cannot be said for certain community and regional banks and BDCs, which might not have had the resources, scale or wherewithal to prepare.
-
North Mill Capital Provides $15 Million Accounts Receivable Factoring Facility
North Mill Capital announced it provided a $15,000,000 accounts receivable factoring facility to provider of oral and personal hygiene products.
The funds were used to pay off the previous lender and provide additional working capital to support the Company's growth. NMC also entered into an inter-creditor agreement with a purchase order financing partner to help meet substantial near-term growth needs.
-
Reaching the Top: C-Suite Women in Secured Finance Roundtable
What does it take to break the proverbial glass ceiling in secured finance? What does the journey to the “top” look like for women in financial services? We interviewed four C-Suite women and here is what they had to say. The women we spoke with are Meredith Carter, president and CEO, Context Business Lending; Miin Chen, COO, Siena Lending Group; Deborah Monosson, president & CEO, Boston Financial & Equity Corporation; and Jennifer Yount, partner, Paul Hastings LLP.
-
Women Leaders Talk About Advancing in the Ranks
Secured Finance executives and an executive recruiter discuss how the industry can attract and retain more women.
-
CARES Act Amendment Summary
On Tuesday, April 21, the Senate passed an amendment to the CARES Act that, among other things, would amend certain provisions of the Paycheck Protection Program (“PPP”), economic injury disaster loans, and emergency grants. The amendment is expected to pass the House later this week and the president has indicated he would sign it. In some ways, the amendment is as notable for some of the things it did not do – it did not create eligibility for financial services firms including community banks and secured lenders to borrow PPP loans, and it did not include rumored restrictions on larger borrower’s access to PPP – as it is for what it did do (increase funding and create a set-aside of PPP guarantees for PPP loans made by certain small and community development lenders).
-
Tips For Working From Home
New to working from home? Check out a few quick tips from ENGS Commercial Finance to help transition from working in-office to working at home.
-
Get to (Really) Know Rob Meyers
The following interview is a transcript from SFNet YoPro Committee member Avi Levine interviewing Rob Meyers, president, CCO & managing member of Republic Business Credit, in April 2020. Rob previously served as chair of SFNet's National Young Professionals Committee and spearheaded the YoPro Annual Leadership Summit, now in its third year. We hope you enjoy getting to know the industry’s young professionals.
-
Meet YoPro Andrew Bertolina
The following interview is a transcript from SFNet YoPro Committee member Matt Gillman, interviewing Andrew Bertolina of Finvoice in late 2019. We hope you enjoy getting to know the industry’s young professionals.
-
Henry Schein Enhances Liquidity Position With New Credit Facility Totaling $700 Million
Henry Schein, Inc. (Nasdaq: HSIC), the world’s largest provider of health care solutions to office-based dental and medical professionals, today announced that it has closed on a new credit facility totaling $700 million, with JP Morgan Securities LLC and U.S. Bank NA serving as Joint Lead Arrangers.
The new facility represents $700 million in committed financing that increases and replaces $200 million in uncommitted financing from the same lenders. The Company’s liquidity position now totals $1.7 billion.
-
Transformational Change and Crisis Costs Weigh Heavily on Both Sides in Stressed and Distressed Retail/Supplier Relationships
Ben Nortman and Ian Fredericks of ReStore Capital examine the financial burden that consumer mandated transformation and the current crisis are imposing on both retailers and their suppliers, and how innovative financial solutions can be leveraged by both to help ensure successful outcomes in stressed and distressed environments.
-
Second Avenue Capital Partners Provides a $17 Million Senior Secured Credit Facility to Crown & Caliber
Second Avenue Capital Partners, LLC (“SACP”) (www.secondavecp.com) announced it has closed on a $17,000,000 senior secured credit facility to Crown & Caliber, an online marketplace leader in authenticated pre-owned luxury watches. The credit facility will be used to support growth opportunities and provide additional working capital.
Founded in 2013 in Atlanta, GA, Crown & Caliber has created an accessible, transparent, and trusted e-commerce platform to buy and sell pre-owned watches. -
Interview with Jennifer Palmer
In January, Gerber Finance announced the completion of its CEO succession strategy, naming longtime president Jennifer Palmer as CEO with Founder Gerald Joseph transitioning to his new role as strategic advisor and chairman of the board.
-
Wingspire Capital Provides $40.0 Million Senior Secured Loan to Save-A-Lot
Wingspire Capital Holdings (“Wingspire”) today announced that it has provided a $40.0 million senior secured loan to Moran Foods, LLC d/b/a Save-A-Lot. (“Sav-A-Lot”). Wingspire’s loan was part of a $150.0 million revolving line of credit among a group of three lenders. Loan proceeds were used to repay existing debt and support Save-A-Lot’s operations and acceleration of its transformation plan.
-
SFNet Responds to Main Street Lending Program Guidance
In a letter to Treasury Secretary Steven T. Mnuchin and Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome H. Powell, SFNet CEO Rich Gumbrecht provided recommendations to help facilitate the objectives of the newly introduced Main Street Expanded and New Loan Facilities as set out by the Federal Reserve. Given that many of the potentially eligible borrowers who would benefit from the Programs have existing collateralized debt, SFNet reasoned that it is critical that the Programs specifically address the relationship between existing secured loans and the additional loans provided for in the Programs. The inability to do so would “limit access to this critical source of capital, imperiling jobs and jeopardizing economic recovery”. The benefit of clarifying and amending these protections would “mitigate the current economic hardship being experienced by [Main Street companies] and bolster this critical part of the capital supply chain”. SFNet further positioned that non-depository lenders should be eligible lenders to maximize the benefit of the Programs.
Click here to view the letter.
-
New UK Insolvency Legislation and its Potential Impact on the Asset-Based Lending Industry: The New Moratorium
Richard Hawkins, CEO of Atlantic RMS, considers the implications of the UK government's latest announcement and its impact on asset-based lending to UK business.