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GE Could Be a $41 Billion Problem for Big Banks

GE Could Be a $41 Billion Problem for Big Banks

(Bloomberg) -- When it comes to U.S. banks’ lending risk, it doesn’t get much bigger than General Electric Co. The five biggest Wall Street firms have committed to lending at least $3.5 billion each to the industrial giant facing concerns about the sustainability of its debt.

GE has almost $41 billion in credit lines it can draw from, according to its latest quarterly regulatory filing. If fully tapped, the two main credit facilities would rank as the largest loans to any U.S. company that go beyond next year, data compiled by Bloomberg show. GE had used only about $2 billion of the available credit by the end of the third quarter, leaving itself ample room to pull more if necessary.

GE Could Be a $41 Billion Problem for Big Banks

From GE’s perspective, the unused credit is a crucial backstop as analysts voice concerns about the risk of a funding shortage. Chief Executive Officer Larry Culp has been selling assets to raise cash and is under pressure to raise more through a stock offering. The untapped credit “gives us a foundation” as the firm takes steps to reshape itself and ultimately reduce its borrowings, he told CNBC this month.

From the banks’ perspective, the possibility of a draw-down by a borrower getting shut out of other funding sources poses risks, including default if the company ultimately proves unable to manage its obligations. In debt markets, the premium demanded by investors to insure against a default has jumped, signaling the possibility of further cuts to GE’s credit rating and higher costs for new borrowings. GE was cut by the two biggest rating firms last month, ending up three grades above junk.

Read more: GE default insurance signals the worst isn’t over

GE divided its credit facilities into three categories at the end of September. The main one includes a $19.8 billion credit line from six banks, which expires in 2020. Then there’s a $20 billion backup facility from 36 banks expiring in 2021. The third group is a collection of credit lines arranged individually with seven banks, expiring between February and May of next year.

Such commitments can make up an outsize chunk of a bank’s portfolio. Morgan Stanley’s share of the first GE facility amounted to 6 percent of its investment-grade lending commitments at the end of September. At Goldman Sachs Group Inc., it was 4 percent of the bank’s high-grade book.

GE Could Be a $41 Billion Problem for Big Banks

“I’m not concerned about GE’s credit at all,” Morgan Stanley CEO James Gorman said Tuesday in an interview on Bloomberg Television. “The market over-worries. GE is a fantastic institution, they have tremendous ability to restructure.”

Spokesmen for the other banks in the first credit line declined to comment, while GE’s referred to Culp’s public remarks.

GE’s quarterly filing doesn’t identify the three dozen lenders in the backup facility or specify how they are splitting their commitment. JPMorgan Chase & Co. is among members of that group, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. So is Wells Fargo & Co., which isn’t one of the lenders named in the first line.

Limiting Exposure

Still, there are limits to banks’ exposure. The first credit line has a mandatory reduction and repayment clause, which reduces the amount available to GE over time. In March, the line is set to be cut by about $5 billion, and in December 2019 by an additional $7.5 billion. In June 2020, the credit line would shrink to just $5 billion. At each milepost, GE would have to pay back the difference if it has drawn more than the remaining amount allowed.

“They’re slowly but surely losing access to that facility, bit by bit,” said Dino Peragallo, a debt covenant analyst at Xtract Research LLC. “Most people refinance their facilities within a year of maturity, so this wouldn’t be a problem typically. But with the concerns GE is facing, maybe it will be tough to get a new facility when this one is reduced.”

Culp told CNBC that the company doesn’t want to maintain its indebtedness. “We have no higher priority right now than bringing those leverage levels down,” he said.

GE’s filing shows there are also so-called offset provisions for firms participating in both syndicates, potentially preventing the company from tapping the same lenders twice. And, banks can -- and usually do -- hedge themselves against losses from big borrowers by buying credit derivatives that act as insurance.

Companies typically draw down heavily on their credit lines when facing funding shortfalls. Earlier this month, California utility operator PG&E Corp. fully used its credit facility. At the time, investors worried the company might lose its investment-grade credit rating or face liability related to wildfires ravaging the state.

To contact the reporters on this story: Yalman Onaran in New York at yonaran@bloomberg.net;Michael J. Moore in New York at mmoore55@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Alan Goldstein at agoldstein5@bloomberg.net, David Scheer, Daniel Taub

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