On May 29, we convened senior deal professionals from Hark Capital, Helios Investment Partners and Silicon Valley Bank for a candid conversation regarding the current state of net-asset-value (NAV) facilities. The discussion – moderated by Reed Smith partners Leon Stephenson and Chris Davis – confirmed that, while the product has matured into an indispensable liquidity tool for many sponsors, its full potential has yet to be tapped. For those who were unable to attend, this article offers 10 takeaways from the panel.

1. A prominent friction point continues to be the narrow construction of NAV borrowing purposes embedded in the Institutional Limited Partners Association’s (ILPA) 2023 guidance. Because the ILPA paper centers on facilities used to pre-fund distributions, some limited partners (LPs) have imposed blanket prohibitions on NAV facilities in side letters without distinguishing between distribution-bridge trades and financings that facilitate value-accretive follow-on investments, opportunistic acquisitions, currency hedging or portfolio-level working capital. General partners (GPs) report that this blunt-instrument drafting obscures the nuanced risk/benefit profile of the product and stifles meaningful dialog around portfolio management tools that could ultimately enhance returns and mitigate downside volatility.

2. The panel agreed that reticence among certain investor constituencies is not dissimilar to the apprehension that greeted the emergence of capital-call facilities two decades ago and the subsequent development of a robust secondary market. In each instance, the industry overcame resistance through education, alignment of interests and disciplined market practice; NAV financings are no different. As sponsors accumulate a verifiable track record of using NAV proceeds judiciously, investor unease should dissipate and yield more balanced LPA drafting, clearer disclosure requirements and, ultimately, cost-efficient execution for borrowers.

3. We continue to observe pronounced regional variation. European funds, often employing European-style holding company (holdco) structures, are architecturally predisposed to portfolio-level leverage and can deliver clean, enforceable security to lenders. U.S. funds, by contrast, may not always have in place an intermediate umbrella holdco structure that allows for the injection of NAV debt. Sponsors active on both sides of the Atlantic should therefore resist a one-size-fits-all mindset and tailor facility documentation to the governing jurisdiction, tax posture and investor base of each fund vehicle.