Lender considerations on fibre roll-out financings
Over recent years there has been a growing
focus from infrastructure funds and other
investors on digital infrastructure as a distinct
asset class, which has in turn lead banks and
other financial institutions to follow suit. Initially,
this was primarily related to towers, but over
recent years we have seen a broader application
to fibre/broadband investments, data centres
and other digital infrastructure opportunities
(such as cable and satellite).
With the impact of Covid-19 combined with
a growing governmental focus on improving
connectivity, this is expected to accelerate.
Digital assets will become increasingly
important in order to support the growth of
smart, sustainable cities; the shift towards
remote working; increased connectivity; and
the digitisation of company operations such as
supply chains.
As part of this series of guides, we set out
below some key considerations for financing
fibre/broadband investments based on
our extensive global experience advising
infrastructure investors, developers and
lenders on such matters, including CityFibre,
Community Fibre and Airband in the UK, PT
MNC Kabel Mediacom in Indonesia, Bahrain Bay
development in the Middle East, Texan City fibre
roll-out in the US and the Australian Government
and National Broadband Network Company
in Australia
Facility structure
Developers and operators require loan facilities
to fund expansions and maintenance of their
fibre network, as well as working capital needs.
A typical loan structure is a primary term loan
facility for capex development together with a
supporting working capital facility. The working
capital facility may be required for general cash
flow needs but may also have a particular use
such as providing an element of bridge funding
in anticipation of subsidy/grant payments from
government. An uncommitted accordion is
also typically included in order to establish a
framework for additional debt capacity.
Maturities vary depending on the underlying
business model, but it is not unusual to see an
availability phase of three to four years to fund
development, with an overall debt maturity of
five to seven years. Repayment is very often
structured on the basis of a bullet repayment at
maturity, with an element of a cash sweep post
availability phase. Sweep structures vary but
can be set at a fixed threshold or can ratchet up
towards maturity - particularly so if flexibility for
distributions is sought by the sponsors.
Sizing of the facilities is tied to the financial
model and a gearing ratio, with gearing
limitations typically requiring equity contributions
of between 30 per cent and 45 per cent of the
total spend, although more traditional gearing
ratios can be distorted to a degree by an ability
to include historic (equity or retained earnings
funded) capital expenditure as part of the equity
component. In this regard we have seen look
back regimes for equity contribution but with
a cut-off date beyond which no account can
be taken of historic expenditure and in some
cases an agreed hardcoded amount for historic
expenditure so as to avoid any debate as to
relevant sums and manipulation of covenants.
Security package
Security will typically include all assets of the
borrower/operating company (including key
contracts, insurances and account balances)
and all shares of (and shareholder loans into)
the borrower/operating company. In terms of
shareholder security, it may be beneficial (for
both lenders and sponsors) to introduce an
intermediary holding company between the
operating company and the sponsors so as to
allow sponsors to trade their equity position
(subject to typical change of control restrictions)
without interference with the security package
or a requirement for security accession
mechanisms and other ancillary requirements,
such as capacity opinions in relation to the
incoming shareholders.
Borrower subsidiaries may also be expected
to provide guarantees and security. Lenders
will typically require an all assets security
package across the borrower group. A primary
operating entity may have subsidiary entities
performing discrete aspects of the operations,
and/or may acquire other corporate interests
as part of expansion/diversification and
market consolidation opportunities. Sponsors
are naturally keen to avoid unduly onerous
requirements of guarantee/security provision in
relation to immaterial subsidiaries and as such
it would be typical to see material company
thresholds tied to overall contribution to the
borrower group (in terms of EBIDTA, turnover
and/or asset value) and a guarantor coverage
threshold (typically entities contributing 80-90
per cent of borrower group EBITDA, turnover
and/or asset value).
As sponsors will be keen to preserve flexibility
for the borrower to make acquisitions and enter
into joint ventures, it is important to recognise
that the security will need to attach to material
acquired assets, including assets of material
subsidiaries and shares in those subsidiaries.
Whilst some flexibility may be afforded, lenders
may seek to impose limitations on a single asset
operating company becoming too acquisitive,
both in terms of nature of business, location and
quantum of investment.
Financial covenants
Financing arrangements for fibre to the home
(FTTH) roll-out will typically have two sets of
financial covenants. One set will be applied as
conditions to utilisation of the primary term loans
and the other on a continuing maintenance basis
with event of default consequences for breach.
A third category may be introduced as
distribution tests.
Conditions precedent
- In addition to gearing limitations, primary
term loans will typically include conditions
precedent to funding tied to penetration
levels (homes connected measured against
homes passed) and also monetary based
KPI thresholds with values attributed to
completed work including homes passed,
homes connected and amount of fibre
installed. It is important to carefully define
concepts such as homes connected and
homes passed and apply appropriate testing
periods so as to ensure that the borrower
is developing an effective and marketable
network with an appropriate level of market
risk, whilst ensuring that the borrower is able
to access funding to develop its business
plan. Considerations for lenders may also
include the level of independent verification
of reporting by the borrower – is borrower
certification sufficient (following a leveraged
finance model) or will lenders require
verification by an independent technical
adviser on the basis of a more project style
financing?
- Homes passed is essentially a measure
of physical deployment of the fibre (and
establishing that a network is sufficiently close
to a home in order to legitimately consider the
homeowner as a potential customer), whereas
homes connected is typically measured by
reference to actual customer subscriptions
(although sponsors may argue that a ready for
service connection in cases where there is no
existing competition or overbuild risk should
count as a connected home). Definitions
will be bespoke including variations for B2B,
wholesale contracts and multiple dwelling
units, and the specifics will be carefully tied
to the technical elements of the business
plan in terms of whether a home is passed
or connected, including by reference to
poles, cabinets, site lines and trenching
requirements. Lenders will want to see not
only that the business plan is being developed
from a technical/physical perspective but also
that the expected take-up of subscriptions is
proportionate to the physical deployment of
fibre and meets business plan expectations
(with suitable degrees of tolerance) so as to
assist with forecasting of the borrower’s ability
to service the debt.
- Sponsors will typically seek to have significant
headroom (and indeed we have seen
examples of full grace periods in early
ramp-up phase months) on the relevant
conditions precedent by reference to the
base case model, so as to avoid a scenario
where a slow ramp up unduly fetters the
ability to deploy the physical infrastructure in
accordance with the business plan.
Maintenance covenants
- Maintenance covenants should only apply
following the utilisation/availability phase,
which is typically when the business can
expect to become EBITDA positive. Since
the lending terms typically cater for a bullet
payment on maturity (perhaps with cash
sweep in advance) an interest cover ratio
and a leverage ratio can typically be found on
loans in this sector. In addition, lenders may
also seek to have more granular visibility on
the operational and financial performance
of the roll-out and include a continuing
covenant linking debt to homes passed and/
or connections.
- Sponsors will endeavour to maximise their
rights to cure breaches of maintenance
covenants with equity injection, however
lenders will seek to limit these rights to avoid
a papering over of systemic problems in the
business case and in this regard lenders
should be wary of net debt tests (as are
common on such financings) as any equity
injection ahead of the calculation/testing date
would then not count as a cure and not be
subject to any limitations on such cures. There
are also likely to be limitations on distribution
rights in scenarios where an equity cure
has been required to avoid breach of a
maintenance covenant.
Operational covenants
The nature of the operational track record and
level of maturity of the borrower’s business will
dictate the extent to which lenders perceive
the operational covenant package to require
prescriptive project finance type controls or be
better suited to a softer, more corporate lending
based capex financing (or a hybrid between both
ends of the spectrum). Some key issues include:
- Controls over accounts, and whether the
borrower should have flexibility to operate
accounts without interference or payment
waterfalls (with security being on the basis
of a floating charge type arrangement) or
whether lenders require prescriptive controls
including reserving for debt service or
maintenance obligations.
- Controls over key contracts, including
construction contracts, operational
contracts and material revenue generating
contracts. The nature of the contracting
structure will impact lenders’ views in this
regard - particularly if there are aggregated
arrangements (such as a key wholesale
revenue contract, or a framework operation
agreement across the portfolio) which
may influence lenders to categorise these
arrangements as material contracts which
will be subject to detailed due diligence and
controls in the loan documentation (such as
restrictions on amendments, waivers and
terminations, default triggers for breach or
termination and requirements for borrower
to enforce its rights in relation to the same).
In the case of a key anchor wholesale
agreement, lenders may also consider a
regime whereby credit events (e.g. insolvency
proceedings) affecting the counterparty
constitute an event of default, given the
importance of the credit standing of such
a counterparty to the sustainability of the
borrower’s business case. In each case this
will then prompt discussion regarding levels
of materiality, cure periods and replacement
rights amongst other flexibilities, with
sponsors likely to push downside scenarios
to distribution lock up events or cash sweep
triggers rather than events of default.
- Ability of the borrower to manage disposal
and insurance proceeds in the ordinary
course of business without lender’s control
or whether specific regimes will apply to
require prepayment of proceeds unless
lender-approved reinvestment plans are
developed by the borrower. Flexibilities for
the borrower might include a window of time
to redeploy without controls, or a de-minimis
level below which no prepayment/controls
will be triggered, noting that any proceeds not
applied in prepayment may need particular
treatment for the purposes of financial
covenants or gearing ratios.
Lenders may also seek to carry out due diligence
and apply relevant controls and protections
in relation to third party infrastructure,
depending on the borrower’s reliance on the
same. FTTH networks typically rely on third
party infrastructure, such as poles and ducts
(particularly if they are only providing ‘last mile’
connectivity) or other infrastructure such as
electricity or sewer networks which may be
used as routing conduits. Lenders will need
to understand the adequacy of arrangements
with relevant third parties in terms of tenor and
access rights for maintenance, repair or upgrade
of the fibre, cost implications, triggers/risks of
termination by the third party, the impact should
termination arise, and what alternatives or
possible replacements exist. Lenders may seek to
introduce information undertakings, covenants,
events of default and prepayment events to deal
with various scenarios.
Government subsidies
Government subsidies can be a material
component of a FTTH operator’s business
plan, including the voucher scheme run in the
UK by Building Digital UK. The extent to which
the borrower relies on such subsidies requires
consideration, as do the terms and conditions
of the relevant subsidies and consequences of
failure to meet conditions. Lenders may seek to
introduce notification or default triggers linked
to breach, although operators will seek to argue
that, provided financial covenants continue to be
met, a more granular breach linked to a particular
subsidy should not collapse the facility.
Lenders may also be sensitive to providing
funding, particularly term loan funding, for
amounts that are intended to be financed by
subsidies. There may be a reluctance to bridge
any funding gap pending subsidy receipts on a
long-term basis, although a revolving working
capital facility could be utilised to provide cash
flow support to developers awaiting payments.
Foreign investment controls
The emergence and growth of controls in
relation to foreign investment is pertinent in the
context of fibre and other technology companies.
Investors will need to be cognisant of restrictions
in terms of planned exit strategy, but lenders
should also be aware of these in the case of any
enforcement of share or physical asset security.
Consistent with a global trend for more
intervention in and scrutiny of national security
issues, the UK Government published the
National Security and Investment Bill on
November 12, 2020 which seeks to introduce
a wide ranging notification and government
approval regime for foreign investment into
sensitive asset classes (and not just limited
to mergers and acquisitions but covering a
much broader range of deals including minority
investments and acquisitions of voting rights).
Communications is listed as an asset class,
thus capturing any public or private electronic
communications network or service.
The retrospective call-in power afforded to the
UK Government means that parties currently
considering transactions in this sector should
consider whether it is advisable for them to
approach the UK Government, and indeed a UK
Government email address has been set up for
notification of such deals. Importantly, the UK
Government’s ability to retrospectively call in a
deal for review once the Bill comes into force will
be limited to six months in the case of a notified
transaction, instead of five years if the deal is not
brought to the UK Government’s attention.
If a deal requiring mandatory notification is not
approved, the transaction will be legally void, and
in addition there are civil and criminal penalties
for breach.
Final thoughts
The importance of fast and reliable fibre
connectivity cannot be underestimated, and
the Covid-19 pandemic has underlined the
critical nature of this asset class. Globally,
government targets in respect of FTTH are only
likely to increase in light of Covid-19. Consumers
working from home require more data and
better coverage which, together with the rollout
of 5G, Internet of Things and focus on smart
cities requires wide scale availability of fibre
connectivity.
Financings in this sector are certainly far from
commoditised, however there are key themes
and issues underpinning sponsor and lender
considerations. An understanding of these
issues and the various options, flexibilities and
alternatives available is vital in order to arrive
at an appropriate and balanced position that
addresses both borrower and lender sensitivities.