Gymboree Borrowing Nearly $1.5 Billion As It Is Taken Private
October 25 2010 - 6:11PM
Dow Jones News
Gymboree Corp. (GYMB) plans to raise $1.465 billion to pay for
the leveraged buyout by Bain Capital Partners that will take the
children's clothing retailer private.
Under the arrangement, Bank of America Corp. (BAC), Morgan
Stanley (MS) and Credit Suisse Group (CS, CSGN.VX) will provide
$720 million in a senior secured term loan, a $520 million senior
unsecured bridge facility that has an increasing rate and a $225
million senior secured asset-based revolving credit facility that
comes due in five years, according to a filing Monday by Gymboree
in connection with the beginning of its tender offer.
Gymboree will have to pay back 1% of the borrowings each year,
under terms of the agreement. The company has said it will use 50%
of excess cash flow to pay down the financing as well as all cash
proceeds netted from asset sales and other issuances of debt, the
commitment letter shows.
Gymboree agreed on Oct. 12 to be bought by private-equity firm
Bain Capital for $1.8 billion, or $65.40 a share, representing a
22% premium to the prior session's close. The offer was higher then
several analysts predicted, but some said the premium was
warranted.
"They've got a great business model with very strong cash flows
and plenty of growth opportunity with their Crazy 8 concept," Lee
Giordano, analyst at Imperial Capital, said at the time the deal
was announced. Crazy 8 sells children's clothes generally targeted
at moderately affluent families.
The deal came as the seller of accessories for newborns to
12-year-olds had been seeing stronger sales and improved margins
after cutting costs during the economic downturn.
And while private equity investors are typically attracted to
companies where there are apparent ways to improve profitability,
those opportunities may be harder to find at Gymboree thanks in
part to management's track record of operating margin expansion
over the past five years and the company's solid balance sheet,
wrote John Zolidis, analyst at Buckingham Research Group.
Still, as children's wear is less fashion driven and has
generally held up better in the economic downturn, Bain may like
the company's growth prospects even in the midst of prolonged high
unemployment, analysts say.
"Parents will spend on their kids even in unpredictable economic
times," said Giordano.
Gymboree shares closed up 2 cents to $64.96 on Monday.
-By Karen Talley, Dow Jones Newswires; 212-416-2196;
karen.talley@dowjones.com
(Veronica Dagher contributed to this article.)
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