• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

GE sees surge in bankruptcy financing

NEW YORK
Mon Sep 22, 2008 10:47pm EDT

Stocks

   
Robert McMahon, managing director for restructuring at GE Corporate Lending, speaks at the Reuters Restructuring Summit in New York September 22, 2008. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid

NEW YORK (Reuters) - General Electric Co (GE.N) expects a five or sixfold rise this year in demand for financing to help bankrupt U.S. companies restructure themselves as the credit crunch leaves a growing number of businesses scrambling for liquidity.

U.S. demand for debtor-in-possession loans, which help companies operating under bankruptcy-court protection, is on pace to hit $10 billion to $12 billion this year, up from about $2 billion in 2007, said Rob McMahon, managing director for restructuring at GE corporate lending.

"Bankruptcies, they fall out of the sky, as we've all seen in the last two or three weeks," McMahon said at the Reuters Restructuring Summit in New York. "We had 40 filings last year. We had 80 year-to-date through the end of August, call that number 100, it's not hard to imagine that DIP volume should be at that $10 billion to $12 billion level."

Overall, the current credit crunch -- which brought on the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc (LEHMQ.PK), prompted an $85 billion U.S. government rescue of American International Group Inc (AIG.N) and caused once-proud Wall Street investment banks to rethink their need for Federal Reserve protection -- makes for the worst economic times in two decades, said McMahon. His unit, part of the conglomerate's GE Capital arm, specializes in providing loans to struggling companies.

The credit crunch has some lenders pulling back from DIP lending, meaning that businesses that file for bankruptcy protection might have a harder time finding that financing.

"If a company is over-leveraged and has a broken business model in an industry that's in trouble ... that's going to be more problematic. There will be a great deal of reticence for bankers to consider lending to that company," McMahon said.

SMELL OF RECESSION

"The 2001 recession didn't feel or smell anything like what we're going through right now," McMahon said. "The 1990 one did, although I do wonder about the magnitude of comparing the 1990 recession ... it feels deeper and wider."

He expects GE's DIP lending to grow at a faster rate than the industry average.

GE's restructuring lending unit expects to make about $2 billion to $3 billion in loans this year, up from $1.75 billion last year, he said. The default rate on its loans is running below the industry average, which has spiked from 0.24 percent at the beginning of this year to about 3.3 percent currently.

While GE is well known for making heavy equipment like electricity-generating turbines and jet engines, the Fairfield, Connecticut-based company makes about half its money from its finance arm.

'SELECTIVE' APPROACH

GE shares lost some 20 percent of their value last week, notching a five-year low on Thursday, only to recover most of the loss by the end of trading on Friday. Investors attributed the drop, which came amid a heavy sell-off in U.S. stocks, to concerns about GE's financial arms.

McMahon said his unit would be proceeding with caution in the face of surging demand for its services.

"When things get frothy and zany like they did two years ago, we're selective. If we need to sit on the sidelines and watch it happen, we will. We're not going to be rolling up an inordinate amount of debt, we're not going to do things that are counterintuitive to our culture," he said. "We originate and we hold. So if we spend time with a company and we understand what you've been through, notwithstanding the fact that you might be in a tough industry, we will be OK with that."

GE shares were off 3 cents at $26.59 in afternoon trading on the New York Stock Exchange, above last week's five-year low of $22.19. So far this year they are down about 28 percent, a deeper drop than the 16.5 percent fall of the broad Standard & Poor's 500 index .SPX.

(Editing by Dave Zimmerman, Phil Berlowitz)



More from Reuters

A male polar bear cannabalizes a polar bear cub in an area about 300km (186 miles) north of the Canadian town of Churchill November 20, 2009. Credit: REUTERS/Iain D. Williams

Polar bear turns cannibal

As the world focuses on climate change in Copenhagen, the animal that has come to represent global warming is turning cannibalistic as the Arctic ice melts their hunting grounds, a U.S.-led global scientific study said.  Slideshow | Full Article 

    Emmanuel Roy, a suspect in a mortgage-fraud scheme is escorted by FBI agents after being taken into custody in New York, October 15, 2009. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid

    Sowing seeds of corruption

    Corruption, whether it's crooked officials, financial fraudsters or philandering sports stars, is the country's No. 1 criminal threat, says the FBI.  Full Article 

    President Barack Obama delivers remarks at Lehigh Carbon Community College in Allentown, Pennsylvania, December 4, 2009. REUTERS/Jim Young

    No price tag on jobs boost

    "There are those who claim we have to choose between paying down our deficits on the one hand, and investing in job creation and economic growth on the other. But this is a false choice."  Full Article