Defaults on corporate loans have jumped, lenders to McDonald’s franchisees are strapped, and big names like GM are facing liquidity problems
A growing number of companies are already feeling the heat. As of Sept. 9, 57 companies had defaulted on $45.3 billion of debt for the year, according to S&P RatingsDirect, up from 22 companies defaulting in all of 2007. (While not a bankruptcy, a default sets off clear alarm bells about a company’s fiscal health.) Of the 57, 45 are outside the financial industry. And more defaults are likely on the way: Roughly 70% of nonfinancial companies carry a noninvestment or junk credit rating. S&P projects that the three-year cumulative default rate between 2008 and 2010 among nonfinancial firms with poor credit will rise to 23.2%, the worst on record since 1981.
Discerning which firms will cave first is difficult, but S&P has identified 162 “weakest links,” or companies in danger of defaulting over the next 12 months. It is the seventh straight month that the roster of credit-unworthy firms has grown. On that list are high-profile names such as United Airlines parent UAL, General Motors, Tribune, Six Flags (SIX), and Trump Entertainment Resorts.
The cash crunch has hit U.S. automakers and airlines particularly hard. General Motors (GM), for one, announced on Sept. 19 that it was drawing down the remaining $3.5 billion of its $4.5 billion credit facility. Goldman Sachs (GS) analyst Patrick Archambault said GM might need to raise as much as $8 billion to cover monthly operating expenses
Even the most iconic Main Street brands are not immune. Franchisees of McDonald’s (MCD) were told Sept. 19 that Bank of America (BAC) could not provide any new loans to pay for the equipment and remodeling needed for the rollout of new coffee bars. “As of now, [Bank of America] is dependent on repayments to get additional funding capacity,” said an internal memo obtained by BusinessWeek. “The bills are coming due, so the franchisees are turning to the banks,” says Richard Adams, a consultant who works with 300 McDonald’s franchisees. “But the banks are having their own problems.”
McDonald’s spokesman Walt Riker did not deny the Bank of America squeeze but insists that other banks are still willing to lend.
by Matthew Boyle

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