⚓️New Chapter 11 Bankruptcy Filing - American Commercial Lines Inc.⚓️
American Commercial Lines Inc.
February 7, 2020
Indiana-based American Commercials Lines Inc. and ten affiliates (the “debtors”), large liquid and dry cargo shippers with an active fleet of approximately 3,500 barges, filed a prepackaged bankruptcy case in the Southern District of Texas to (i) effectuate a comprehensive restructuring of $1.48b of debt ($536mm RCF and $949mm term loan) and (ii) inject the debtors with much-needed new capital via a rights offering. Now, we know what you’re thinking: the debtors are just the latest victims of the oil and gas crash. While oil and gas do make up some small portion of the debtors’ revenues (10%), this is incorrect. Other factors complicated the debtors’ efforts to service their bulk of debt (see what we did there?). Hold on to your butts, people.
The company notes:
Beginning in early 2016, the inland barge industry entered a period of challenging conditions that have resulted in reduced earnings. These challenges were brought on by a variety of international trade, macroeconomic, industry capacity, and environmental factors. The industry has experienced a prolonged period of declining freight rates, grain volume volatility related to international competition and tariffs on U.S.-grown soybeans, and excessive operating costs incurred as a result of extreme flooding conditions. Freight rates during 2016 and 2017 were under continued downward pressure from reduced shipping demand for metals, grain, refined products, petrochemicals, chemicals and crude oil. These declines resulted in part from pressure on the U.S. steel industry linked to dumping of foreign steel into U.S. markets, increased international competition in grain exports, and the decline in North American crude oil production in response to an oversupply of global crude oil.
Wow. So much to unpack there. It’s as if the debtors’ diversified revenue streams all fell smack dab in the middle of each and every declining sector of the US economy. Reduced steel shipments due to Chinese dumping ✅. Distress in agriculture leading to less volume ✅. Oil and gas carnage ✅.
Compounding matters was increased barge supply (read: competition) due to an increase in coal shipments. That’s right, folks. We’re back to coal. Less coal production = redeployed ships looking for replacement cargo = more competition in the liquid and dry cargo space = decreased freight rates.
The debtors got a temporary reprieve in late 2017 when the Trump administration imposed steel tariffs. A short-lived recovery in steel prices combined with a temporary recovery in oil prices and, due to the above issues, a slowdown in barge construction, helped rates recover a tad.
It didn’t last. In mid-2018, China imposed tariffs on US-grown soybeans. Agricultural products constitute 36% of the debtors’ revenues. Combined with flooding that disrupted farming and navigable waterways, the debtors experienced approximately $86mm in increased operating costs. So, yeah, no bueno. As the debtors note with no intended irony, all of these factors amount to a “perfect storm” heightened mostly by an unsustainable and unserviceable debt load.
A few things to highlight here in terms of the process and trajectory of the cases:
This serves as yet another example where the pre-petition lenders used the debtors’ need for additional time to fund a short-term bridge and, in exchange, lock down a full rollup of the pre-petition debt into a $640mm DIP credit facility. The term lenders will also provide a $50mm DIP to fund the administration of the cases.
The term lenders are equitizing their $949mm term loan, getting 100% 7.5% “take back preferred equity” and “new common equity” in return. Their estimated recovery is 38%. Post-reorg, the major owners of the debtors, therefore, will be Contrarian Capital Management LLC, Finepoint Capital LP, and Invesco Ltd.
The company will get a $150mm of new money via a backstopped rights offering supported by certain holders of term loan claims. This new money infusion (in exchange for 10% junior preferred equity to that noted above and provided subject to a 7% backstop premium) will presumably give the debtors some additional runway should the market forces noted above persist.
Jurisdiction: S.D. of Texas (Judge Isgur)
Capital Structure: $536mm RCF and $949mm term loan
Professionals:
Legal: Milbank LLP (Dennis Dunne, Samuel Khalil, Parker Milender) & Porter Hedges LLP (John Higgins, Eric English) & Seward & Kissel LLP
Post-Reorg Independent Director: Scott Vogel
Financial Advisor: Alvarez & Marsal LLC
Investment Banker: Greenhill & Co. Inc.
Claims Agent: Prime Clerk LLC (*click on the link above for free docket access)
Other Parties in Interest:
Prepetition ABL & DIP ABL Agent: Wells Fargo Bank NA
Legal: K&L Gates LLP (David Weitman, Christopher Brown)
Preptition Term Loan Agent: Cortland Capital Market Services LLP
Ad Hoc Group of Term Lenders: Contrarian Capital Management LLC, Finepoint Capital LP, and Invesco Ltd.
Legal: Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP (Damian Schaible, Darren Klein, Erik Jerrard) & Rapp & Krock PC (Henry Flores, Kenneth Krock)
Financial Advisor: Evercore Group LLC
Large Equityholder: Platinum Equity