Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “leveraged finance”
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Accordion Feature
An accordion feature — also called an incremental facility — is a provision in a credit agreement that allows the borrower to increase the size of the existing loan facility without negotiating a new credit agreement. Like the instrument it is named for, the facility can expand when the borrower needs more room.
What It Is When a company closes a syndicated credit facility, it typically negotiates a maximum size — a term loan of $500 million, for example, or a revolving credit facility of $250 million.
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PIK Loan
A PIK loan — Payment in Kind loan — is a debt instrument where the borrower pays interest not in cash but by issuing additional debt. Instead of writing a check for interest each quarter, the borrower adds the interest to the outstanding principal balance. The lender receives more paper; the borrower preserves cash.
What It Is In conventional lending, interest is paid periodically in cash. PIK flips this. The borrower’s interest obligation accumulates as additional loan principal, which itself accrues further interest in subsequent periods.
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Springing Lien
A springing lien is a security interest that does not exist at loan origination but automatically comes into force when a specified triggering event occurs. The lien “springs” into existence — without any additional documentation or action by either party — the moment conditions are met.
What It Is In secured lending, a lien gives the lender a claim on specific assets if the borrower defaults. Normally, liens are granted at closing: the borrower pledges assets, the lender takes a security interest, and the arrangement is documented in the credit agreement.
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Toggle Notes
Toggle notes are a hybrid debt instrument that allows the issuer to pay interest either in cash or by issuing additional debt — toggling between the two modes, typically on a period-by-period basis. The toggle is a contractual right, not a default. The issuer elects how to pay; the election itself does not constitute a breach.
What They Are Toggle notes combine features of conventional cash-pay bonds and PIK (Payment in Kind) instruments.