An article by 17Capital executives Robert de Corainville and Greg Hardiman focuses on the dynamics of the NAV finance market in 2022 and predicts explosive growth in the years to come. The article dives into NAV finance data from 2022 and provides a comprehensive analysis behind NAV financing’s strength amid turbulent markets. To view the article, click here.
The Fund Finance Association has officially opened registration for the 7th Annual European Fund Finance Symposium, which will be held on Monday, June 19, from 9 a.m. to 7:15 p.m., at the QEII Conference Centre in London. For more information or to register, please click here.
The program will feature a wide range of expert practitioners from across the fund finance community, including lenders and lawyers. The discussion will focus on the criticality of sourcing liquidity for operational leaders in private capital funds, and will also examine the rapidly shifting landscape when it comes to who is providing capital, as well as the increased complexity of the fund finance market.
We know this has been a challenging time for many of our clients and friends in the fund finance industry, both professionally and personally. We join the broader fund finance community in offering our support in every way we can.
Stepping back and looking to provide industry guidance more broadly, we have created a “Financial Markets Resource Center” to serve as a central point of access for our firm’s insights regarding market developments.
The resource center features our best thinking on fund finance and the banking industry more broadly – in the form of Clients & Friends Memos and special issues of Cabinet News and Views, Fund Finance Friday and REF News and Views. We are also populating the resource center with additional informational resources and will continue to add timely content as it is produced.
And, of course, our best resource of all is our transatlantic fund finance team. Our lawyers have been working around the clock and around the globe to monitor developments, advise our clients on active transactions, and help them and the fund finance community keep pace with the broader implications of the ever-changing developments.
The past six months have been turbulent in the fund finance world. We have seen lenders in the market deal with significant capital constraints, we have seen a small amount of lenders scale back in the fund finance lending market, deciding to deploy capital elsewhere, and we have also seen a large number of new lenders enter into the fund finance market to take advantage of rising interest rates and quality sponsors in need of liquidity. This past week, the focus shifted to the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank and specifically what exactly will happen to the fund finance loans held by those lenders. In light of the above background, we thought it would be helpful to highlight some of the techniques commonly used by market participants when transferring an existing loan, and some key considerations when doing so.
In recent months, as lenders in the fund finance market have been more selective and demand for financing from fund borrowers remains high, we have seen a number of instances of lenders considering the use of and actually incorporating “market flex” provisions into their deal documents.
Women in Fund Finance hosted a panel discussion yesterday that featured a panel of senior women in infrastructure who discussed everything from their career paths to issues facing the infrastructure industry, such as the fundraising outlook, fund allocations, the impact of inflation and valuations, and the use of debt in these structures. Not surprisingly, ESG played a prominent role in the discussion.
Barclays has an opening for a new Legal Vice President to join its growing Corporate Banking Legal team in New York. Basic qualifications include a minimum of five years’ experience working in commercial lending at a law firm and/or in-house. For a more detailed description of the role and information on how to apply, please visit here.
We have been fielding questions since Friday from counterparties to SVB and Signature asking whether they should continue to perform under their fund finance deal documents. Syndicate banks where SVB or Signature Bank are the agent have inquired whether they should continue to fund in response to borrower draw requests and, if so, whether they should fund to the agent as required under their credit agreement or if they should figure out a way to fund to the fund borrower(s) directly. Fund borrowers have also been wondering whether to make typical payments to these parties.