A Kaulkin Ginsberg Publication
TransUnion
11/21/2009

Debt Buyers Getting Creative to Fund Portfolio Purchases

December 11, 2008
 

The frozen credit markets have caused funding sources for debt buyers to dry up, leaving many purchasers with fewer choices. But some in the industry say that investors are missing an opportunity.

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The accounts receivable management industry is feeling the pinch of a prolonged recession like every other sector of the economy. And while access to credit is tight for most debt buyers, some are still finding money available to fund debt portfolio purchases.

One of the factors prolonging the current economic downturn is the drying up of credit markets due to major financial institutions’ capital liquidity pinch; put simply, banks are not lending to consumers or businesses because they don’t have the money. This impacts all businesses in the U.S., but it hits debt purchasers in a very direct fashion.
 
Bad debt buyers rely on financing to fund account purchases. Typically, a debt purchaser will have a credit facility with major lenders in place to fund purchases on a going-forward basis. The facilities are arranged for years at a time. When the company wants to make a purchase, they draw down on the lending facility or line of credit.

These lines of credit have remained relatively intact. Some have even been expanded. Portfolio Recovery Associates, one of the largest debt buyers in the U.S., reported in September that its credit facility had been expanded by $25 million to accommodate a new lender, JP Morgan Chase.

Other credit agreements have been imperiled. West Asset Management said in April that a change in the terms of its lending agreement caused the company to pull out of the arrangement (“WAM to Reduce Debt Buying in 2008 Over Funding Flap,” April 18).

The “good news-bad news” theme on funding was echoed at a recent meeting hosted by ACA International. Attendees at ACA’s Fall Forum in November agreed that portfolio purchase financing has been hard to come by lately (“Debt Buyers Discuss Falling Portfolio Prices and Funding at Forum,” Nov. 10).

Stewart W. Hayes, senior vice president at Wells Fargo Foothill Lender Finance, a provider of senior secured financing from $10 million to $1 billion and one of the speakers at the conference, said that lenders are taking a much more critical look at debt buyers and other prospective borrowers than they once did.

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Comments

Comment from thecheeseman on December 11, 2008 at 3:44PM EST

debt buying will probably be reduced to very meager offerings for awhile.

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