HSF acts in $1.2bn restructure

The deal was one of the most significant and complex restructurings in the Australian market of 2017

HSF acts in $1.2bn restructure

Herbert Smith Freehills (HSF) has acted for the senior lenders on the $1.2 restructure and recapitalisation of the Bis Industries group.

HSF advised the senior lenders, including entities managed by The Carlyle Group and affiliates of Värde Partners, on the transaction that was implemented in two stages.

Paul Apathy, HSF partner, said that the transaction was one of the most significant and complex restructurings in the Australian market of 2017. The senior scheme involved a number of unique elements not usually seen in creditors’ schemes, he said.

Most Read

HSF said that Bis Industries group’s ownership structure was reorganised to transfer ownership to its senior lenders. Two creditors’ schemes of arrangement, and a subsequent recapitalisation of the group’s balance sheet through a partial debt-for-equity swap, were used.

The restructure simplified the group’s complex and highly geared capital structure to comprise senior secured debt and ordinary equity held by the senior lenders and PIK Note holders. The senior debt was significantly reduced from about $1.2bn to about $280m and $38m in finance leases, the firm said.

The deal was the first time a creditors’ scheme of arrangement has been used in the Australian market as an interim stabilising step in a broader restructuring process.

“The schemes also provided for a novel amendment mechanism in the group’s finance documentation to reduce the consent threshold required to take actions in relation to the senior debt, in order to more readily facilitate a debt for equity conversion and a rescheduling of the group’s debt, thereby obviating the need for a further creditors’ scheme of arrangement to ultimately implement the recapitalisation,” HSF said.

In addition to Apathy, partners John Nestel and  Andrew Rich led the HSF team. They were assisted by teams across HSF’s corporate, finance and disputes practice groups, including partner Laura Sheridan Mouton; senior associates William Chew, Rowena White, Nikki Smythe and Margaret Fong; and solicitors Tiffany Cheung and Joshua Santilli.


Related stories:
Legal giants act in sale of 1,000MW power station
International firm helps bag $2.2bn refinance

Recent articles & video

Baker McKenzie boosts Los Angeles team with transactional lawyers from Munger, Tolles & Olson

AI legal risk company spins off from DC law firm to address emerging challenges

Paul Hastings bolsters private equity practice with new team led by Alexander Temel

Tamboran Resources taps SPB for advice on first long-term gas sales agreement

First Racial Justice Conference in Australia zooms in on invisible race discrimination

US law firm settles copyright lawsuit over alleged court filing plagiarism

Most Read Articles

Top young stars of Australia's legal profession for 2024 unveiled

Promotions round beefs up Clyde & Co's Australia partnership

Allens welcomes five new partners

Tech and IP stars join up with Allen & Overy