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This article addresses the legal and practical issues for lenders on leveraged buy-outs in relation to taking security over warranty and indemnity insurance policies.
This article first appeared in the March issue of Butterworths Journal of International Banking and Financial Law.
In recent years there has been a steady increase in the use of buy-side warranty and indemnity (W&I) insurance policies in the European mergers and acquisitions (M&A) markets as limited recourse acquisition structures prevail and the premium rates and terms on offer have become increasingly flexible and competitive. A W&I policy can provide the buyer with reliable financial protection, in many cases giving the potential for a more straightforward and expedient route to financial recompense than the alternative of a claim against the seller under the sale and purchase agreement (SPA) or against management warrantors who may remain within the business.
Many sellers will favour a clean exit from the SPA so that the sale proceeds can be distributed without the potential for claims, avoiding the need for sale proceeds to be held subject to escrow arrangements. This is particularly important for private equity sellers who may be prevented from taking on SPA liabilities under the terms of their fund documentation or need to make immediate distributions to their investors. W&I policies with no recourse against the seller (and a consequential increase in the policy premium) may therefore be preferred in many circumstances.
In principle, the existence of a well-constructed W&I policy should be an attractive prospect from the perspective of lenders financing an acquisition and a key element of their security package. It is no exaggeration to say that if a target business becomes distressed after acquisition, a claim under the W&I policy may be the only remaining asset that provides a route to a recovery.
It is critical for lenders to ensure that the security taken over these rights is appropriate and that the considerations for enforcing that security is well understood.
The first step to a lender obtaining a robust security position in relation to the W&I policy is to review the terms and coverage of the policy itself alongside the review of the SPA, as the rights of the lender under the security can never be better than those afforded to the buyer under the policy itself and (subject to any enhancements contained in the policy) the insured warranties/indemnities in the SPA. The areas of the policy that will be of particular relevance to the lender will include the following:
Lenders may also look to include a specific undertaking in the facilities agreement requiring the policyholder to comply with any on-going requirements under the W&I policy.
Lenders would normally want to take an assignment by way of security over the buyer's contractual rights under the policy, being a mortgage over those intangible rights. In terms of the documentation, where the buyer is an English company, this will typically be included within the English law 'all asset' debenture granted by the buyer at exchange at the same time as the SPA and facilities agreement are signed.
Unless the transaction is structured such that there is very limited or no recourse against the seller, the lenders to the buyer are likely to require an assignment of the buyer’s rights under the SPA in addition to the security over the rights under the W&I policy.
It is important to ensure that such an assignment is in respect of the policyholder's rights to the proceeds of a claim, and does not purport to extend to an assignment of the policy itself. A transfer of the entire policy may more accurately be described as a novation of the insurance contract, where the assignee will become the insured party and assume the obligations of the policyholder. There is sufficient usage of the term "assignment" with this wider meaning, however, to lead to uncertainty if the drafting does not expressly limit the assignment to the rights to the proceeds of claims made by the policyholder under the policy.1
An assignment of the entire policy is to be avoided, first as the lender will not expect to become liable for the obligations under the policy, and secondly as a purported transfer of the policy itself could lead to the insurer denying claims. This denial would be on the basis that the assignee as the new policyholder does not hold any insurable interest – it was not the entity to which the warranties were given – and/or that its insurable interest was not the interest covered by the policy. This would be on the basis that the assignee’s interest is related to the risk of non-payment of its loan, but that this was not the interest covered by the policy (which is the risk of loss through acquisition of a business which was not as valuable as it was warranted to be).
Provided there is no relevant restriction on assignment under the terms of the policy, an assignment by way of security can transfer the policyholder's right to the proceeds of a claim to the lenders (subject to the equity of redemption, allowing the policyholder to have the rights to the proceeds transferred back to it once the secured obligations have been discharged). The policyholder will continue to be responsible for bringing and litigating any claim under the policy.
This structure would not entitle the lender to control the conduct of the making of a claim under the policy. This means that if the policyholder is not co-operative, the making of a claim through it may need to be achieved in another way in any enforcement scenario, such as by procuring a change of the board of directors after having enforced share security over the shares in the policyholder or by exercising voting rights contained in that share security or by the exercise of a security power of attorney.
In practice, however, it would be difficult for a lender to be in a position to make a claim under the policy without cooperation from the policyholder, management of the target business and/or the private equity sponsor. A disputed claim under a W&I policy will likely be complex and will require the support of the key persons with detailed knowledge of the target business and/or that were involved with the acquisition. The purpose of the security interest should therefore better be considered as a means of ensuring that the proceeds from such claim are controlled and applied in repayment of the debt in priority to other creditors.
If no notice of the security interest is given to the insurer, the assignment of the buyer's rights to the secured party will be an equitable assignment. This can be transformed into a 'legal' or 'statutory' assignment pursuant to s.136(1) Law of Property Act 1925 by giving written notice of the assignment to the insurer, provided that the conditions in that section are complied with.
S.136(1) Law of Property Act 1925 applies to the assignment of a debt or other legal thing in action where the following conditions are satisfied:
Transforming the assignment to a statutory assignment is advantageous as it would allow the assignee (the secured party) to commence proceedings for non-payment of the proceeds of a claim against the insurer without the need for joining the assignor (the policyholder) to those proceedings, which would be the case if there were only an equitable assignment. In the context of leveraged buy-outs, the request for a notice to the insurer may be resisted or requested to be moved to a perfection step taken at the time of an event of default or declared default, in line with the general trend in negotiation of security documentation on transactions with strong sponsors to move all but the most essential aspects of security perfection to matters to be taken only in a distressed scenario. Given the key importance of a W&I policy to the acquisition structure and likely corresponding limited (or lack of) recourse against the sellers, in most cases there should be no proportional reason for the lender to forego the notification to the insurer as a condition to closing (which, as noted, may in any event be a requirement under the terms of the policy). Most insurers providing W&I insurance will be accustomed to engaging with and accommodating the financing parties, and there are unlikely to be any commercial sensitivities which may occasionally exist in delivering such notices to the sellers in the case of an assignment of rights under the SPA.
Other forms of direct contractual protection for lenders may be seen but are generally less advantageous or are more cumbersome:
It is clear that a watertight security interest over the W&I policy could be vital in a severe downside scenario where policyholder and/or target business have become distressed and the acquisition warranties and/or indemnities in the SPA have been breached giving rise to recourse under that policy. This can sometimes be overlooked as an area of focus in the heat of negotiation and there are plenty of traps for the unwary.
Authored by Jamie Rogers and Oliver Shafe.