Narrative
Full Description
Project narrative
On August 27, 2021, the New York Branches of Bank of China (BOC) (captured via Record ID#99730) and the Bank of Communications (BoComm) (captured via Record ID#99731) contributed $110 million and $35 million, respectively, to a $2 billion syndicated term loan to Parker Hannifin Corporation -- a Fortune 250 global leader in motion and control technologies -- for its acquisition of Meggitt PLC (a UK manufacturer of components and subsystems for aerospace, defense, and selected energy markets). The loan had a maturity of three years and an interest rate most likely consisting of a 1% margin plus contemporary LIBOR. Parker Hannifin Corporation successfully completed its acquisition of Meggitt PLC on September 13, 2022. Twenty six (26) institutions participated in the lending syndicate. Keybank National Association contributed $166 million and acted as administrative agent. Citibank, Bank of China (BOC), BNP Paribas, Mizuho Bank, PNC Bank, TD Bank, Truist Bank, US Bank, and Wells Fargo each contributed $110 million and acted as joint lead arrangers and bookrunners. BOC, PNC Bank, TD Bank, US Bank, and Wells Fargo also acted as documentation agents. Citibank acted as sole syndication agent. Barclays and HSBC each contributed $80 million. Bank of New York Mellon (BNY Mellon), Commerzbank, MUFG Bank, and Northern Trust Company each contributed $65 million. BBVA, DBS Bank, Huntington National Bank, and Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation (SMBC) each contributed $56 million. Bank of Communications (BoComm), First National Bank (FNB), National Westminster Bank (NatWest), Santander, and Unicredit each contributed $35 million. Associated Bank contributed $25 million.
Staff comments
1. AidData is currently estimating the loan's interest rate as the stated margin rate (1%) plus the average contemporary 6-month LIBOR (0.15475%). The margin rate was based on an assumption that Parker Hannifin entered into the loan with and maintained a Moody's credit rating of A3 or higher. LIBOR could have been selected by the receiving agency at the 1, 3, or 6-month interval, which carry different interest rates. In addition, the final applicable LIBOR was determined by dividing the raw rate by 100 minus the contemporary federal reserve requirement. As the selected LIBOR interval is currently unknown and the federal reserve requirement was 0% when the loan agreement was signed, the current estimation is the best possible guess. LIBOR information was taken from this source: https://www.global-rates.com/en/interest-rates/libor/american-dollar/24/usd-libor-interest-rate-6-months/