Preparing a Business for Sale in 3 Steps
We've created a 3-step guide to help prepare a business for sale, including exit planning, assembling your deal team, and starting the M&A process.
Advisors, Business Owners, Private Equity
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2016 has witnessed some of the most bizarre, curious, and unprecedented decisions on the part of central bankers and the issuers of government debt. In this age of information and hyper-technology, we demand instant gratification at all turns and we insist on waiting for nothing.
We simply want it now, no matter what “it” is.
Thanks to central bankers around the world, we are able to borrow money at historically low rates. So today, it is that much easier to purchase whatever we desire, exactly when we want it.
This reality has led to current state of the interest rate in the modern world, best described in two words: Dubious and Precarious.
Consider some of these recent events from around the globe:
The aftermath of 2008’s financial crisis has had a lasting effect on the U.S. economy and led many to question our economic stability looking forward. The displacement of jobs, the loss of individuals’ retirement funds and savings, and the overall state of our country’s economy amassed to create a recession in our country that was the most profound since the Great Depression of the 1930s.
Fast forward eight years and policymakers are still nervous about spurring another incident of this magnitude. The Federal Reserve continues to prolong the decision to hike interest rates, in order to ensure that our country is economically strong enough to support an increase.
In the last few months, however, the general consensus among policymakers and pundits is that it’s time to rip the Band-Aid off. However, the question remains: when will this rate hike take place?
The most recent meeting of the Federal Reserve concluded with nearly an even split between those in favor and those against raising interest rates as early as next month. A strong case can be made for either side. Those against a hike, point to an employment rate that has not significantly increased and an economy that saw a decrease in the production of goods and services. Those in favor point to a return of some stability in oil prices and the strong performance of the U.S. dollar, and argue that a raise in interest rates is needed to encourage saving rather than spending.
The fact of the matter is that the Federal Reserve will raise interest rates at some point in the future. The question is whether or not this will help or hurt our economy if not done at the appropriate time.
While the interest rate may have become nothing more than a signpost on the road to uncertainty, we are still able to spot the obvious beneficiaries of the current scenario: borrowers. There may have never been a better time to be a corporate borrower, and all corporate borrowers should be taking advantage of the current landscape.
A consequence of the prolonged period of extremely low interest rates has been the formation of numerous new private debt funds as yield-hungry investors seek some type of return on capital. More lenders than ever have led to an oversupply of cheap financing. For companies seeking leverage or companies with flat financial performance alike, there may have never been a better time to borrow money. And our strong feeling is that for borrowers, now is the time to act. Even active participants in the debt markets have no way of knowing when the current friendly lending environment might turn unfriendly. Future periods will eventually see higher borrowing costs and could quite possibly see further market and regulatory constraints to lenders.
The most efficient way to seek debt capital is by hiring a trained professional advisor who can help refine your company’s message and navigate the ups and downs of the market and the nuances of each lender and each type of debt.
The fall of each year brings about a call to attention for any corporate borrower seeking to complete a deal by year-end. The clock is ticking to prepare a debt offering with any chance of completing and fund the deal before December 31. However, given today’s accommodating debt markets and future uncertainty, there is an even greater level of impetus to market participants to seek financing or refinancing now. Quality borrowers can come close to naming their price and structure, and less than quality borrowers still have an open window to getting their deal across the finish line. Such a borrower-friendly market may not last much longer.