The Credit Investor's Handbook: Leveraged Loans, High Yield Bonds, and Distressed Debt
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About this ebook
The leveraged credit market is currently valued at over $4 trillion and is one of the fastest-growing asset classes, fueling demand for well-trained credit analysts.
The Credit Investor's Handbook: Leveraged Loans, High Yield Bonds, and Distressed Debt is the definitive guide for young investment professionals embarking on a career investing in the leveraged credit markets – whether public, private, performing, or distressed. Experienced professionals will also immensely benefit from this guide as they refine their investment skills.
Michael Gatto has twenty-five years of investing experience in the debt markets at Silver Point Capital (a $20 billion credit-focused fund) and Goldman Sachs' Special Situations Group. Furthermore, he is an adjunct professor at Columbia Business School and Fordham University's Gabelli School of Business. Michael brings these experiences together in this comprehensive manual, teaching the skills to succeed in the dynamic and complex credit markets. Michael brings highly complex case studies to life using decades of his first-hand war stories and combines them with reflections from leading industry professionals, often infused with humor, to make the book accessible, readable, and fun.
Michael's seven-step credit analysis process will prepare you for a career in credit investing at the top buy-side and sell-side firms on Wall Street by teaching you the technical skills needed to invest in the debt markets. Whether you are analyzing a loan origination in the private debt market, a new issue of a broadly syndicated loan (BSL), a high-yield bond (HY), or a secondary trade, the comprehensive knowledge gained from this book will equip you to make well-founded investment recommendations. Additionally, an entire section devoted to distressed debt investing incorporates a practitioner's perspective on the nuances of bankruptcy and restructurings to develop strategies to profit from opportunities in this opaque market. In clear, straightforward terms accessible to the layperson, Michael explains strategies pursued by distressed companies such as J. Crew and Serta that have led to creditor-on-creditor violence, giving you an insider’s perspective on some of the least understood transactions in the distressed arena.
You will:
- Gain In-Depth Knowledge: Understand the complexities of credit markets, from trading dynamics to historical credit cycles, allowing you to identify debt investment opportunities—and avoid pitfalls.
- Master the Analytical Framework: Learn Michael's seven-step process for analyzing credit investments, including qualitative industry and business analysis, financial statement analysis, forecasting, corporate valuation, relative value analysis, and debt structuring.
- Learn How to Write an Investment Recommendation: Review real-life credit memos to understand how analysts translate this framework into recommendations that drive investment decisions at the top credit funds.
- Discover Key Concepts and Terminology: leveraged buyout financings (LBOs), trading levels (price, yields, and spreads), shorting, and credit default swaps.
- Navigate Distressed Debt: Explore the strategies and nuances of distressed debt investing, including bankruptcy, subordination, creditor-on-creditor violence, and high-profile case studies from the past three decades of Chapter 11 restructurings.
This book caters to finance majors pursuing investing careers, credit analysts seeking to enhance their skills, and seasoned professionals aiming to expand their expertise. Professors, researchers, lawyers, and advisors servicing the credit industry will also find immense value in this comprehensive guide.
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The Credit Investor's Handbook - Michael Gatto
The Credit Investor's Handbook
Leveraged Loans, High Yield Bonds, and Distressed Debt
MICHAEL A. GATTO
Logo: WileyCopyright © 2024 by Michael Gatto. All rights reserved.
Published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Hoboken, New Jersey.
Published simultaneously in Canada.
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ISBN 9781394196050 (Cloth)
ISBN 9781394196036 (ePDF)
ISBN 9781394196043 (ePUB)
Cover Design: Wiley
Cover Image: © oxygen/Getty Images; Xuanyu Han/Getty Images
Author Photo: Courtesy of the Author
To my wife, Mary Kay, thank you for all your support during the past 25 years. I could not have done any of this without you.
To my children, Gabriella and Matthew, it has been my greatest joy watching you grow into kind and caring young adults. You inspire me to be a better person.
To my dad, I miss your guidance and wish you were still here.
To my mom, I love you for how you raised me, Carolyn, Laura, and Julia. You taught us by example how to deal with the curve balls life throws our way. You are the best mom ever!
To my sisters, to be clear, this makes me unambiguously mom's favorite until one of you writes a book and dedicates it to her.
Finally, to all my students, you have been my inspiration to write this book.
Disclaimer
Views Expressed. All views expressed herein are those of Michael Gatto (the Author
) as of the date set forth on the cover and do not represent the views of his current or former employers, or any entity with which the Author has ever been, is now, or will be affiliated, including without limitation, Silver Point Capital, L.P. and its affiliates (collectively, Silver Point
).
Except as otherwise specified herein, the information contained herein is believed to be accurate as of the date set forth on the cover. No assurance is made as to its continued accuracy after such date and neither the Author nor John Wiley & Sons, Inc. (the Publisher
) has any obligation to update any of the information provided herein. All information and views contained herein are subject to change without notice.
Informational Only; No Investment Advice; Not an Offer. The views expressed herein are for informational purposes only, and are not intended to be, and should not be, relied upon by you as an investment recommendation, in connection with any investment decision related to any investment, including investment in any investment fund or other product, or for any other purpose. This book is not intended to, and does not, constitute legal, tax, or accounting advice. This book is not an offer to sell, or a solicitation of an offer to buy, any security. Prior performance is not any form of guarantee as to future results.
References and Examples Illustrative Only. Any and all examples included herein are for illustrative and educational purposes only, and do not constitute recommendations of any kind, and are not intended to be reflective of results you can expect to achieve. Case studies of investments have been provided for discussion purposes only. As a result, any factual information, including price levels and company financial information, may be altered or changed, should not be relied upon, and is presented solely for informational and teaching purposes. These investments may be illustrative of potential investment strategies. The case studies do not discuss (and should not be interpreted to discuss) the amount of any profits or losses, realized or unrealized, in connection with the investments. There can be no assurance that the processes or analyses described can be successfully applied to other investments. None of these case studies are indicative of Silver Point's investment strategies, prior investment performance, or investment portfolios of the funds it manages. Such strategies, performance and portfolio do not reflect those of the select examples set forth herein. There can be no assurance that similar investment opportunities will be available in the future or, even if they were, that such investments would be successful. Differences in, among other things, the timing of transactions and market conditions prevailing at the time of investment may lead to different results. It should not be assumed that any of the investments discussed herein will be profitable or that other investments will have traits similar to the investments presented herein.
Information Accuracy. The Author cannot and does not guarantee the accuracy, validity, timeliness, or completeness of any information or data (including information and data provided by third parties) made available to you for any particular purpose. Neither the Author nor the Publisher will be liable or have any responsibility of any kind for any loss or damage that you incur in the event of error, inaccuracies, or omissions.
Risk. Investments involve a high degree of risk and should be considered only by investors who can withstand the loss of all or a substantial part of their investment. No guarantee or representation is made that the investments and investment strategies discussed herein will be successful, and investment results may vary substantially over time. Investment losses occur from time to time. Nothing herein is intended to imply that the investments and investment strategies discussed herein may be considered conservative,
safe,
risk free,
or risk averse.
PAST PERFORMANCE OF AN INVESTMENT IS NEITHER INDICATIVE NOR A GUARANTEE OF FUTURE RESULTS. NO ASSURANCE CAN BE MADE THAT PROFITS WILL BE ACHIEVED OR THAT SUBSTANTIAL LOSSES WILL NOT BE INCURRED.
No Reliance. Neither the Author nor the Publisher will be liable, whether in contract, tort (including, but not limited to, negligence), or otherwise, in respect to any damage, expense, or other loss you may suffer arising out of or in connection with any information or content provided herein or any reliance you may place upon such information, content, or views. The information presented should not be relied upon by you. Any investments you make are at your sole discretion and risk.
Disclaimer of Warranty and Limitation of Liability. In no event will the Author, the Publisher, their affiliates, or any such parties be liable to you for any direct, indirect, special, consequential, incidental, or any other damages of any kind.
Intellectual Property. Silver Point
and Silver Point Capital
are registered trademarks owned by Silver Point and/or its affiliates. Any recipient of the information contained herein has no right to use the trademarks, service marks, logos, names, or any other intellectual property or proprietary rights owned by Silver Point and/or its affiliates. This presentation constitutes copyrighted material and cannot be used, reproduced, or transmitted, in whole or in part, without the prior written consent of Silver Point. This presentation does not grant any patent, copyright, trademark, or other proprietary right or license to any recipient of the information contained herein.
Foreword
David Solomon, CEO Goldman Sachs
Long before I was the CEO of Goldman Sachs, I was a first‐year analyst in a credit training program, unaware of how important what I learned there would be to my career.
It wasn't part of the plan. When I graduated from college in May 1984, I was thinking of going to law school. But I was busy during my senior year, the idea of studying for the LSAT wasn't all that appealing to me, and once I saw my score, I decided it was time to get a job. I was rejected by most of the places I applied, including Goldman Sachs, but eventually I landed at a commercial bank called the Irving Trust Company, where for the first year my fellow recruits and I received extensive financial training.
Only later did I realize how fortunate we had been. When I first walked into Irving's New York offices in the ornate One Wall Street building, all I had was an undergraduate degree in political science. I had no formal business education to speak of, and I was more than a little intimidated. But luckily for me, we spent most of that first year taking classes taught by professors from the University of Virginia's Darden School of Business. We were essentially getting paid to get an MBA.
It was in that program that I learned how to perform credit analysis, a foundational skill for any finance professional, and I proceeded to use it at every stage of my career. After a little less than two years at Irving, I worked in high yield sales at Drexel Burnham, and later I went to Bear Stearns to lead a piece of its junk‐bond business. Then, in 1999, I joined Goldman Sachs to co‐head the Global High Yield Business Unit, leading the firm's high yield bond and bank‐loan underwriting, trading, and sales. That job put me on the path to becoming the co‐head of the Investment Banking Division.
Today, there's a huge demand among finance professionals for a do‐it‐yourself guide to credit analysis because many banks have scaled back or eliminated their training programs, and we all should be grateful that my friend Michael Gatto has answered the call. What I like about The Credit Markets Handbook is that it covers the fundamentals as well as more advanced topics such as bankruptcy and distressed debt investing, all while being easy to understand and fun to read.
You'd be hard‐pressed to find someone better qualified to write this book than Michael. I worked with him during my early years at Goldman, and I've always been impressed by his clear, analytical mind. He developed and taught credit training for several years before joining Goldman's leveraged finance division, first on the bank loan trading desk and then in the distressed debt proprietary trading business. In addition, he taught various credit courses to Goldman professionals in the US and Europe.
But perhaps his best recommendation is what he did next. In 2002, Michael left the firm to join two former Goldman partners, Ed Mule and Bob O'Shea, in launching one of the world's most successful credit investment funds, Silver Point Capital.
And now he's written a first‐rate textbook. After 39 years in finance, I can't stress enough the importance of a firm grounding in credit analysis, and if you're wondering whether this book has what you need, take it from me: you're in good hands.
David Solomon
Acknowledgments
For the last year and a half, every business call I had ended with some version of the following:
Hey, did I mention I'm writing a credit training textbook? I will send you a couple of chapters, and I would love to get your opinion.
For those with value‐added comments, it became a no good deed goes unpunished
scenario in which I rewarded thoughtful readers with … more chapters to review. This continued until someone stopped responding to book‐related emails, which was fine because by then I had latched on to others.
In light of how many people I asked to contribute their time, feedback, and input to this book, it is inevitable that I will inadvertently leave someone out of these acknowledgements, and I apologize to any of you whose names should be here but are not.
My heartfelt thanks go out to the following people.
Ed Mulé and Bob O'Shea, the founders of Silver Point.
Every concept covered in this book has been learned or refined during my 25 years working for you, first at Goldman Sachs and then at Silver Point. I can never thank you enough for all you have done for me, including supporting me in writing this book.
David Reganato, Silver Point Partner and Global Head of Restructuring.
My kids joke that you are my third and favorite child, to which I respond that they are partially wrong. You took the brunt of the Can u do me a favor?
inquiries for this book.
The other Silver Point partners:
John Abate, Partner and Co‐Head of Trading;
J.T. Davis, Partner and Head of Public Desk; and
Eve Teich, Partner and Head of Investor Relations and Marketing.
Stefania Mazzuoccolo, my amazing and wonderful assistant. Thank you for all your help, especially in designing all the graphics.
Paul Alzapiedi, Co‐Head of Trading, Silver Point Capital
Ara Lovitt, Managing Director and Head of Research, Silver Point Capital
Steve Weiser, General Counsel, Silver Point Capital
I cannot thank each of you enough for your help throughout the process.
Ellen Carr, my editor.
I thank you for all your hard work and contributions. Working with you was fun. I enjoyed debating how to explain complex concepts, and the only time you were wrong was your incorrect belief that my reference to Fight Club in Chapter 10 was not funny.
Josh Pearl, coauthor of Investment Banking. Thank you for your guidance throughout the process.
Paul Johnson, coauthor of Pitch the Perfect Investment. Thank you for convincing me to write a book.
The Wiley team:
Bill Fallon, acquisition editor, who was a champion of this book.
Stacey Rivera, Purvi Patel, Lori Martinsek, Aldo Rosas, ArunRaj Arumugam, and Rahini Devi. I appreciate your patience, guidance, and support throughout the process of publishing.
Various industry professionals who provided quotes, floated ideas, read chapters, and gave honest feedback. This book benefited greatly from the input of:
Daniel Aronson, Senior Managing Director, Restructuring and Liability Management, Evercore
Carla Casella, Managing Director, JP Morgan
Adam Cohen, Managing Partner and Portfolio Manager, Caspian Capital
Paul Degen, Global Head of Credit Sales, Barclay's
Phil Desantis, Portfolio Manager, Soros Fund Management
Jack Devaney, Partner and Head of Leveraged Finance Sales, Goldman Sachs
Rio Dhat, Head EMEA of Leveraged Credit Trading, Citi
Dennis Dunne, Partner and Head of Financial Restructuring, Milbank
James Ely III, CEO, PriCap Advisors LLC
Fred Fogel, Partner & General Counsel, The Baupost Group
Jeff Forlizzi, Head of Corporate Credit, Security Benefit / Eldridge Industries LLC
Bob Franz, Chief Investment Officer and Co‐Founder, Arbour Lane Capital Management
Avi Friedman, former Co‐Head Credit Investing, Davidson Kempner Capital and Adjunct Professor, Columbia Business School
Nathaniel Furman, Partner, Oak Hill Advisors, L.P.
Kumail Gangjee, my first TA at Columbia Business School
Mitch Goldstein, Partner and Co‐Head of Credit Group, Ares
RJ Grissinger, Senior Managing Director, Centerbridge Partners
David R. Hility, Managing Director & Co‐Head Global Restructuring, Houlihan Lokey
Donna M. Hitscherich, Senior Lecturer and Director of the Private Equity Program, Columbia Business School
Mark Horowitz, Managing Director, Distressed Sales, Jefferies
Matt Kahn, former Founding Member of the Private Equity and Second Lien Lending Business, Gordon Brother Group
James Russell Kelly, Director of the Gabelli Center for Global Security Analysis and Senior Lecturer, Fordham Gabelli School of Business
Alan Kornberg, Of Counsel and former Co‐Chair of the Restructuring Department, Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP
Michael Kramer, CEO and Founding Partner, Ducera Partners
Matthew Kretzman, Managing Director, Global Head of PE Capital Markets, H.I.G. Capital
Daniel Krueger, Partner and Managing Director, Owl Creek Asset Management and Adjunct Professor of Business, Columbia Business School
Howard Levkowitz, Founder and Managing Partner, Signal Hill Holdings
Richard Maybaum, Managing Director and Co‐Head of Credit Strategies, Littlejohn & Co
Drew McKnight, Co‐Chief Executive Officer, Fortress Investment Group
Bruce Mendelsohn, Partner & Head of Restructuring, Perella Weinberg Partners
Michael Meyer, Head of Global Sales and Trading, Seaport Global Holdings
Justin Murfin, Associate Professor of Finance, Cornell University
Michael Patterson, Governing Partner, HPS Investment Partners
Jacob Pollack, Global Head of Credit Financing & Direct Lending, Credit Markets, J.P. Morgan
Bill Raine, Senior Managing Director and Co‐Portfolio Manager, Contrarian Capital Management
JP Rorech, Managing Director, Head of Distressed, Stifel Financial Corp.
Chris Santana, Managing Principle, Co‐Founder, Monarch Alternative Capital
Damian Schaible, Partner, Co‐Head Restructuring Group, Davis Polk
Roopesh Shah, Senior Managing Director, Restructuring and Capital Markets Advisory, Evercore
Eric Siegert, Senior Manager and Global Co‐Head of Financial Restructuring, Houlihan Lokey
Derron Slonecker, Founding Partner, Ducera Partners
Steve Starker, Co‐Founder, BTIG
Christine Victory, my former assistant
Rob Thomas Symington, Adjunct Professor Cornell University
Parag Vora, Founder, HG Vora Capital Management LLC
Alan Waxman, Co‐Founding Partner and CEO, Sixth Street
Harry Wilson, Founder and CEO, MAEVA Group, LLC
Steven Zelin, Partner, Global Head of Restructuring and Special Situations, PJT Partners
John Zito, Senior Partner and Deputy CIO of Credit, Apollo Management
Silver Point employees who proofed chapters and provided significant input:
Nick Aynilian, Director, Silver Point Capital
Matt Chilewich, Managing Director, Consultant Relations, Silver Point Capital
Hayden Choi, Associate, Silver Point Capital
Anthony DiNello, Managing Director and Head of Private Credit Silver Point Capital
Joseph Fallon, Managing Director, Silver Point Capital
Zane Feldman‐Isaksen, Associate, Silver Point Capital
Nate Goodman, Associate, Silver Point Capital
Carter Hass, Director, Silver Point Capital
Kyle Hyland, Associate, Silver Point Capital
Michael Jordan, Managing Director, Silver Point Capital
Eric Karp, Senior Advisor, Silver Point Capital
James Kasmarcik, Chief Compliance Officer, Silver Point Capital
David Koziol, Managing Director, Silver Point Capital
Matt Landry, Vice President, Silver Point Capital
Sherman Lee, Director, Silver Point Capital
Conor Mackie, Director, Silver Point Capital
Alyssa Mehta, Director, Silver Point Capital
Josh Milgrom, Director, Silver Point Capital
Taylor Montague, Managing Director and Head of Capital Markets, Silver Point Capital
Paul Morris, Associate, Silver Point Capital
Jaclyn Mulé, Associate and grammatical genius,
Silver Point Capital
Parker O'Shea, Associate, Silver Point Capital
Tom O'Connor, Senior Trader, Silver Point Capital
Manjot Rana, Managing Director, Silver Point Capital
Max Sahlins, Associate, Silver Point Capital
Austin Saypol, Chief Operating Officer, Silver Point Capital
Matt Sheahan, Managing Director and Head of Underwriting, Silver Point Capital
Billal Sikander, Managing Director, Silver Point Capital
Derek Staples, Managing Director, Silver Point Capital
Anthony Van Dervort, Associate, Silver Point Capital
Lu Wang, Associate, Silver Point Capital
Jared, Weisman, Managing Director, Silver Point Capital
Genna Zaiman, Managing Director, Silver Point Capital
Jon Zinman, Managing Director, Silver Point Capital
Finally, thank you to my spring 2023 Advanced Credit Class students at Fordham, who were my guinea pigs. You read my first drafts and spotted calculation errors. If there are any mistakes, it is your fault!
Olivia Bezzone
John Bollish
Grace L. Ciccone
Matthew F. Forlenza
Benjamin Goodrich
Ashley Hassell
Ricardo He
Tamar Hovsepian
Daniel Kelly
Natalia Kimmelshue
John Koutsonikolis
Richard Lazzaro
Aidan Lezynski
Matthew M. Mai
Diego MunozLedo
Henrik Murer
William Murphy
Emma Nance
Joe Nussbaum
Declan O'Donnell
Chris Owen
Patricio Pulla
Wynne Scheffler
Mitchel Selitsky
Emme Simning
Alex S. Simon
Bobby Singh
Elaine Sionov
David Smeriglio
Billy Smith III
Lois Van Weringh
Freddy von Knobelsdorff
Leo Wackerman
About the Author
Michael Gatto
Partner, Head of the Private Side Businesses
Silver Point Capital
Adjunct Professor
Columbia Business School
Fordham University's Gabelli School of Business
Michael Gatto was one of the first employees at Silver Point Capital, a credit‐focused hedge fund. After joining the firm in April 2002, he became the first non‐founding partner in January 2003 and helped grow the business from $120 million of investable capital in 2002 to approximately $23 billion. Today, he heads the firm's Private Side Businesses.
From 1999 to 2002, Michael worked at Goldman Sachs on the bank loan trading desk and then in the Special Situations Investing Business, where he focused on distressed credit.
Before joining Goldman, Michael designed and taught credit training programs for banks and investment banks. He taught at some of the world's leading financial institutions, including Citibank, CSFB, Union Bank of Switzerland (UBS), American Express Bank, Fleet, and Barclays in global financial centers such as New York, Boston, London, and Singapore, as well as more remote locations, including Bangladesh, Manila, and Cairo. Before becoming a professional credit instructor, he was a credit analyst and head of Global New Entry Training at Citibank.
Michael is also an adjunct professor at Columbia Business School and Fordham University's Gabelli School of Business, where he teaches courses on credit analysis, distressed value, and special situation investing.
Michael received an MBA from Columbia Business School and a BA in Economics from Cornell University.
To Contact the Author:
Please feel free to contact the author with any questions, comments, or suggestions at [email protected] or connect with him on LinkedIn.
About the Editor
Ellen Carr
Principal, Portfolio Manager
Barksdale Investment Management
Adjunct Professor
Columbia Business School
Ellen Carr is a principal and high yield bond portfolio manager at Barksdale Investment Management (BIM), a majority‐women‐owned investment management firm focused on investment grade and high yield fixed income. Prior to joining BIM in 2013, Ellen spent 11 years at The Capital Group as a leveraged credit analyst and portfolio manager.
Ellen is also an adjunct professor of finance at Columbia Business School, where she teaches courses on the credit cycle and cash flow forecasting. She is a regular contributor to the Financial Times and the coauthor of a book on women in investment management, Undiversified: The Big Gender Short in Investment Management.
Ellen received an MBA from the Kellogg Graduate School of Management at Northwestern University and a BA in literature from Harvard.
Preface
MY STORY
This book aims to prepare you for an investment career in the credit markets or, if you are already in the business, to enhance your skill base.
While there is a multitude of books on investing in equities, there are few books on investing in the credit markets, and to my knowledge, none as comprehensive as this one.
My unique background allows me to combine a teacher's approach with real‐world experience. For the past 25 years, I have invested in the credit markets through multiple economic cycles and global crises alongside some of the world's most successful credit investors. I have had the opportunity to learn from, mentor, teach, and manage dozens of Wall Street's brightest minds. Along the way, I developed a systematic methodology for analyzing credit.
After graduating from Columbia Business School in 1993, I started my career at Citibank, a global commercial bank just breaking into the more lucrative investment banking business that was then dominated by the likes of Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Merrill Lynch, Lehman Brothers, and Bear Stearns. Citibank's main attraction was its well‐regarded credit training program: a six‐month course in the fundamentals of credit analysis that every new corporate finance hire was required to take.
In 1994, Citibank's senior management wanted to revamp its credit training program and set out to find a recent graduate of the program to spearhead the project. When asked to spend six months working on this assignment, I worried that it would set back my career. I believed the quickest path to success at the bank and on the Street was by working on deals. However, management assured me that if I did this assignment, I could choose my next rotation, so I agreed to focus on revamping Citibank's credit training program.
The project was a wonderful experience that piqued my interest in a career as a professional instructor. Once the revamp was completed, I was asked to run the training program, which I did for three years across Citibank's global footprint. I left Citibank to become an independent consultant, designing and teaching credit analysis for other financial institutions. I teamed up with Barry Frohlinger, a veteran in the bank training world whom I had previously worked with on revamping the Citibank program. Barry was a charismatic instructor, and I was fortunate to spend the next two years designing programs and teaching credit analysis with him. We taught at some of the world's leading financial institutions, including Citibank, CSFB, Union Bank of Switzerland, American Express Bank, Fleet, and Barclays. We ran courses in global financial centers such as New York, Boston, London, and Singapore, as well as more remote locations, including Bangladesh, Manila, and Cairo. Over time, I became a credit expert,
despite having never done any actual deals.
Meanwhile, my former students were beginning to populate a growing number of credit investing seats across Wall Street, as the asset class grew rapidly, spurred by the burgeoning leveraged buyout (LBO) market. And then, in 1997, I received a call that would change my life.
A former student of mine was working for Bob O'Shea, a young partner at Goldman Sachs, and had mentioned to Bob that I was the best credit investor he had ever met, as evidenced by the multitude of banks that had hired me to teach their analysts (hilarious given my lack of real deal experience). On my former student's recommendation, Bob cold‐called me to interview for a job on Goldman's loan trading desk. I was intrigued; while I loved teaching credit analysis, I felt I would be better positioned professionally if I had real deal experience. He explained that while Goldman had always dominated in M&A and IPOs, the bank had only recently begun growing its credit business and developing a new market in trading illiquid bank loans. Bob had joined Goldman from Bear Stearns in 1990 to develop this business and had teamed up with Ed Mulé, another young partner, to build out Goldman's broader credit investing business.
Bob did not fit the typical Ivy League, white‐shoe, Goldman mold. He was a scrappy kid from New Jersey and, like me, came from a modest background. His grandmother was a maid at the Waldorf Astoria hotel, and his father was a New York City cop. After attending Fordham on a track scholarship, he joined Security Pacific Bank and later Bear Stearns. Bear was known to recruit young, aggressive professionals who were poor, hungry, and driven, referred to as PHD
candidates. Bob became one of the pioneers of Bear's bank loan trading business. Before the loan trading market developed, loans sat on the balance sheets of the original syndicate of banks, meaning banks had no ability to monetize these loans or move them off their balance sheets if they needed access to liquidity or if their risk tolerance or the underlying credit quality of the borrower changed. Bob recognized an opportunity to develop a market to trade loans similar to the high‐flying junk bond
market effectively created by Michael Milken.
In 1990, Goldman Sachs recruited Bob from Bear Stearns to build the firm's bank loan business. During the recruiting process, Bob pitched Goldman on a strategy to become the number one market maker in the secondary bank loan market before launching its corporate bank loan underwriting business. Goldman embraced Bob's plan, knowing that the global money center banks would fight to retain their leading market position in the profitable business of underwriting leveraged loans. Bob was hired as a vice president at the very young age of 24 and was the only employee in this new group until he could prove out the business model, which over time called for Goldman to commit billions of capital.
Bob's plan worked, as his group became the market leader in trading loans. Goldman used its number one market position in trading loans in the secondary market to become the first investment bank to penetrate the commercial banks’ dominance in the leveraged loan underwriting business. As Bob built the business in North America and Europe, he earned the reputation of being a visionary leader and business builder. In addition to partnering with Ed to build the firm's proprietary credit investing business, Bob also ran other groups at Goldman, including the global high yield bond business, which included managing all sales, trading, capital markets, research, and the firm's CLO business while also running the international bank loan business. Goldman made him a partner in 1994 at the age of 29—the second‐youngest partner in the firm's history.
Like Bob, Ed Mulé came from modest means (i.e., he was a PHD
in Bear Stearns’ speak). Ed graduated from a public high school in a primarily rural, working‐class area of upstate New York. He was admitted to the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School despite handwriting his application (he did not know that typing was the standard method). Ed funded his studies with financial aid and a government Pell Grant. While at Wharton, he was admitted into the selective Wharton joint BS/MBA program, which accepted only 4 of the 600 students in his class. Ed completed the BS/MBA program in four years instead of the usual five, graduating magna cum laude with both a BS and an MBA at the age of 21.
Ed's grit and determination paid off. Upon graduating in 1984, he joined Goldman Sachs's highly respected M&A department. Navigating the shift from his no‐frills roots to working at a white‐shoe investment bank was not easy, but Ed excelled, building a reputation for being thoughtful and analytical as well as a highly commercial investment banker. Ed had an unusual ability to exercise sharp judgment in complex situations by tying together granular company‐level analysis with an appreciation of the macro‐level factors shaping a situation. It was this approach that allowed Ed to see things that others missed. For instance, when most M&A departments viewed the telecom sector as a low‐priority backwater, Ed correctly anticipated that regulatory and technological forces would drive a boom of strategic M&A and private equity activity. With that foresight, Ed helped position Goldman to take advantage of the telecom sector's rising tide.
After seven successful years in Goldman's M&A department, Ed was recommended by Hank Paulson (future Goldman CEO and US Treasury Secretary) to work with Goldman's then co‐CEOs on firmwide strategy. Three years later, Ed was elected a partner in the same class as Bob, at the young age of 31, and was soon asked to move again, this time into the private equity investment area. But Ed believed that his skill set, experience, and intellectual curiosity could have the highest impact on Goldman's emerging distressed debt business. The firm agreed and eventually tasked Ed and Bob with jointly building what ultimately became Goldman's proprietary credit investing operation.
When I got that initial call from Bob, it was a good thing that I did not know how brutal the interview process to join his and Ed's team would be. I had five intense meetings with Ed and Bob, followed by ten other meetings with various Goldman professionals, followed by five rigorous case studies. Eventually, Goldman made me an offer, and I accepted on the condition that I could take 6 to 12 months to wind down my teaching commitments.
During that wind‐down period, global markets suffered an economic downturn resulting from the 1998 Asian Financial crisis. Goldman's macro proprietary trading desk was hit particularly hard, and significant mark‐to‐market losses caused the bank to put in place a temporary hiring freeze. Barely two weeks before my first day there, my phone rang in London, where I was finishing up my last assignment for Citibank. It was Bob, who told me there was no longer a job waiting for me at Goldman. The timing couldn't have been worse; I had just given up all my teaching clients, no one was hiring, as most Wall Street firms were dealing with losses, and my wife was pregnant with our first child. I was ecstatic to be a father—just not an unemployed father with limited savings.
Although there was no longer a role for me at Goldman, as a gesture of good faith, the firm committed to paying half my annual guaranteed compensation. Contractually, I was owed nothing. I suggested to Bob that it was a terrible deal for Goldman to pay me with nothing in return and offered to work for six months effectively for free, as the original offer was to pay me this amount not to show up. I was gambling that the world would be a better place in six months, and I would position myself to be offered a permanent job at the firm. Goldman was reluctant to take me on for free,
as it did not want additional headcount—even if having me work for six months cost nothing. But after refusing to take no for an answer, I struck a deal to join the firm through a temp agency so as not to impact Goldman's official headcount.
My gamble paid off with a full‐time offer on Goldman's loan trading desk. I eventually moved to the Special Situations Group (SSG
), led by Ed. I initially focused on distressed retailers and made a name for myself at the firm through luck and a lot of hard work. In addition, for the first time in my life, my bank account was starting to grow.
Goldman had a culture of risk‐taking, and the firm was a breeding ground for some of the best investors of all time, including David Tepper of Appaloosa, Cliff Asness of AQR, Eddie Lampert of ESL, Tom Steyer of Farallon, and Leon Cooperman of Omega Advisors. Eleven of the original 15 desk analysts and traders I worked with ended up either starting their own firms or heading a group at a well‐established firm, including Adam Cohen, cofounder of Caspian Capital; Alan Waxman, cofounder of Sixth Street; Jason Colodne, cofounder of Colbeck Capital; Bruce Mendelsohn, head of restructuring at Perella Weinberg; Jody LaNasa, founder of Serengeti Asset Management; Kevin Ulrich and Tony Davis, co‐founders of Anchorage Capital; Jim Gillespie and Jonathan Savitz, cofounders of Greywolf Capital; Damien Dwin, founder of Lafayette Square; Mark DeNatale, head of distressed trading at CVC; and Vivian Lau, founder of One Tusk Investments.¹
After four years at Goldman, I faced another career choice. Ed and Bob retired from Goldman in 2001 and 2000, respectively. In 2002, Bob joined Ed, who was launching a new credit investing firm. I had three options: stay at Goldman Sachs, join Ed and Bob, or return to teaching. As with many decisions on Wall Street, greed and ambition played a prominent role. Joining on the ground floor of a new fund could lead from a seven‐figure net worth to eight figures, maybe even nine! And if it didn't work out, teaching would still be there. I decided I would join Ed and Bob and return to teaching no more than five years later.
Silver Point Capital launched in January 2002 with $120MM of capital to invest. I joined the firm in April and became the firm's first non‐founding partner in January 2003. I initially continued the work I was doing at Goldman Sachs, but as the firm grew, I moved off the trading desk to build out Silver Point's private businesses, which grew to include (i) off‐the‐run
strategies, (ii) real estate investing, (iii) a restructuring group, and (iv) corporate lending. Today, I continue to oversee Silver Point's private side activities and mentor the next generation of investors at the firm.
As it turns out, navigating my Goldman job offer was good training for a career in which tough negotiations feature prominently. Either personally or through people who worked for me, I have negotiated some of the most exciting and complex bankruptcy and restructuring deals around the globe, including the restructuring of Quinn Industries, an Irish industrial company; Novasep, a French biochemical business; Steinhoff, a South African retailer; Codere, a Spanish gaming company; Studio City, a Macau gaming company; Delphi, the world's largest auto supplier; and Hostess, the iconic manufacturer of Wonder Bread and Twinkies, to name just a few.
Over its 20‐year history, Silver Point has consistently generated highly attractive returns, and as of the writing of this book, the firm manages approximately $23 billion of investable capital across both public and private credit strategies. Silver Point has received multiple industry accolades and is recognized as one of the world's top credit investing firms.
Obviously, I did not follow my plan of returning to full‐time teaching within five years of joining Silver Point. While I enjoyed helping my partners build a world‐class credit firm, I missed teaching. I reentered the academic world as an adjunct professor at Fordham's Gabelli School of Business in 2013 and Columbia's Graduate Business School in 2016, where I teach courses on credit and special situations investing. Furthermore, in 2021, Bob and I sponsored the establishment of the Fordham O'Shea Center of Credit Analysis and Investment to address the growing need for well‐trained credit analysts. I serve as director of the Center, which has three goals:
To offer students a secondary concentration in credit that helps them obtain and prepare for top‐tier jobs;
To provide networking opportunities and foster ongoing professional learning;
To establish a Giving Back
program for underserved communities in the Bronx.
My students often ask if there is a textbook they can use to supplement class discussions and case studies. I have thus far failed to find one. Part of my inspiration for writing this book was to fill this void by creating a textbook I could assign for my courses and recommend to colleagues in both the investing and academic realms.
I have included as close to everything I know about credit analysis in these pages. I hope and believe that you will find here the tools to succeed in a career that involves analyzing and investing in leveraged credit.
NOTE
¹ Not all of these professionals are still at the firms mentioned.
Introduction: Structure of the Book
The goal of this book is simple: to prepare you for a career investing in corporate debt or, if you are already in the business, to enhance your skill base.
Corporate debt falls into three risk categories:
Investment grade: low risk of default, usually issued by the largest and most stable companies;
Non‐investment grade (also known as high yield or junk bonds and leveraged loans/credit): higher risk of default;
Distressed debt: highest risk of default, sometimes already in bankruptcy.
Investors tend to specialize in one type of debt defined by its underlying riskiness. Debt investors evaluate risk by assessing the probability of a payment default (i.e., the potential that the company cannot pay its interest or principal when due) and the severity of loss in the event of a default (i.e., the estimate of how much of the investment will be lost if the company defaults).
This book focuses on investing in the non‐investment grade and distressed debt markets, where the greatest opportunity for return exists.
In preparing to write this book, I interviewed virtually everyone I know in the credit space with experience managing new credit analysts. I did this to find out what skills they wished their new hires had. Three themes stood out:
Analysts hired directly from undergraduate and MBA programs were not prepared to do relevant, real‐life, real‐time analysis on actual companies. It was common for their professors to use fictitious companies and hypothetical situations. Students learned the basic concepts of investment analysis; however, when they landed a job, they lacked an understanding of how to analyze companies using actual financial disclosures, such as a 10‐K. A company's financial disclosures are complex and confusing; an analyst needs to be comfortable comprehending and gathering relevant information from them.
Even when new hires could put together a proper analysis, they were often not able to draw conclusions from their work. They typically learned the ratios used to analyze a company's profitability, leverage, etc. However, they did not always know how to translate their work into investment recommendations. At best, they performed helpful analysis, but readers of their research needed to draw their own conclusions, reducing the value of the work.
Finally, new hires tended to lack a framework for writing a concise investment memo. Most firms have an investment committee that approves new investments going into a portfolio. Before the investment committee meets to debate the merits of an idea, an analyst will prepare and circulate a memo that includes the high‐level investment thesis, a detailed description of the company, the risks of the investment, and all supporting relevant analysis. I bolded and underlined relevant because, in my experience, many analysts want to include everything in an investment memo to demonstrate the depth of their work. But an investment committee is made up