Sallie Forth to a BB Rating

If you bought the rumor

on Friday that Sallie Mae was about to go private, you’re feeling pretty smug

this morning. Sure, SLM shares closed at $46.76 on Friday, up almost 15% on

the day. But now it turns out that Christopher Flowers and

his consortium are willing

to pay $60 for them, valuing the student lender at $25 billion.

There are echoes of the TXU buyout here: both companies are in politically

fraught and unpopular industries, and private equity is stepping up where public

shareholders have proved themselves fearful. (Sallie Mae was trading at $55

per share last summer.)

Flowers, along with fellow-bidders JP Morgan Chase, Bank of America, and Friedman

Fleischer & Lowe, is making a long-term bet on Sallie Mae and trusting that

the political firestorm in New York and Washington will blow over sooner or

later.

Flowers is probably right, but it’s a risky bet all the same. Sallie Mae makes

a lot of money by lending money to students and then getting Uncle Sam to pay

it back in the event of default. If the government ever tires of subsidizing

the private sector in this way, no amount of "private student loans"

– loans made outside the federal guarantee program – are likely

to be able to justify the $25 billion price tag.

The most interesting part of the deal, however, is not the politics so much

as the financial engineering. Sallie Mae, like most lenders, has relatively

little debt, mainly because it feels it needs a rock-solid credit rating in

order to minimize its borrowing costs. But all that is about to change now:

this deal is being done with $16.5 billion in new debt, which could well bring

Sallie Mae all the way down to junk high-yield status.

And where will Sallie find the money to lend out if it has a double-B credit

rating? Why, its shareholders, of course: JP Morgan and BofA have promised a

credit line of as much as $200 billion if the bond markets prove recalcitrant.

In 1997, Sallie Mae was a government agency with a triple-A rating. Five years

later, it was down to single-A. Five years after that, it’s likely to be down

to BBB at the highest. That’s progress, that is.

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