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Debt
12 Months Ended
Dec. 31, 2022
Debt  
6. Debt

6. Debt

 

On August 30, 2019, the Company entered into the Credit Agreement with Santander Bank, N.A., for itself, M&T Bank, National Association. and TD Bank, N.A. as lenders (the “Credit Agreement”), that included a $100 million term portion and a $20 million revolving commitment portion. Proceeds of the term loan were used to repay the Company’s remaining outstanding term loan (and to terminate its existing credit facility) with M&T Bank, N.A. (approximately $19 million) and to acquire Big 3 Precision. The term portion of the loan required quarterly principal payments of $1,250,000 for an 18-month period beginning December 31, 2019. The repayment amount then increased to $1,875,000 per quarter beginning September 30, 2021, and continues through June 30, 2023. The repayment amount then increases to $2,500,000 per quarter beginning September 30, 2023, and continues through June 30, 2024. The term loan is a 5-year loan with the remaining balance due on August 30, 2024. The revolving commitment portion has an annual commitment fee of 0.25% based on the unused portion of the revolver. The revolving commitment portion has a maturity date of August 30, 2024. The Company borrowed $10,000,000 on the revolving credit facility and subsequently paid it back during 2022 and did not borrow any funds on the revolving commitment portion of the facility during 2021. The interest rates on the term and revolving credit portion of the Credit Agreement vary. The interest rates may vary based on the LIBOR rate plus a margin spread of 1.25% to 2.25%. The Company’s obligations under the Credit Agreement are secured by a lien on certain of the Company’s and its U.S. subsidiaries’ assets pursuant to a Pledge and Security Agreement, dated August 30, 2019 with Santander Bank, N.A., as administrative agent.

 

The Company’s loan covenants under the Credit Agreement require the Company to maintain a senior net leverage ratio not to exceed 4.25 to 1. In addition, the Company will be required to maintain a fixed charge coverage ratio to be not less than 1.25 to 1.

 

On August 30, 2019, the Company entered into an interest rate swap contract with Santander Bank, N.A., with an original notional amount of $50,000,000, which was equal to 50% of the outstanding balance of the term loan on that date. The Company has a fixed interest rate of 1.44% on the swap contract and will pay the difference between the fixed rate and LIBOR when LIBOR is below 1.44% and will receive interest when the LIBOR rate exceeds 1.44%. On December 31, 2022, the interest rate for half ($24.0 million) of the term portion was 6.1%, using a one-month LIBOR rate, and 3.19% on the remaining balance ($40.0 million) of the term loan based on a one-month LIBOR rate.

 

The interest rates on the Credit Agreement and the interest rate swap contract are susceptible to that the transition from LIBOR to alternative benchmark rates such as SOFR. Information regarding this transition is provided below.

 

The ICE Benchmark Administration (the “IBA”) ceased publication of all settings of non-US dollar LIBOR and the one-week and two-month U.S. dollar LIBOR settings on December 31, 2021, with the publication of the remaining U.S. dollar LIBOR settings scheduled to be discontinued after June 30, 2023. The Adjustable Interest Rate Act (the “LIBOR Act”), which was signed into law on March 15, 2022, provided a replacement framework for outstanding financial contracts tied to LIBOR once LIBOR ceases to be published. The LIBOR Act provides a statutory mechanism and safe harbor that applies on a nationwide basis to replace LIBOR with a benchmark rate, selected by the Federal Reserve Board based on SOFR, for certain contracts that reference LIBOR and contain no or insufficient fallback provisions. The LIBOR Act preempts and supersedes any state or local law, statute, rule, regulation, or standard relating to the selection or use of a benchmark replacement or related changes and allows parties that already have effective fallback provisions to opt out of the legislation. On December 16, 2022, the Federal Reserve adopted a final rule implementing the LIBOR Act that, among other things, identifies the applicable SOFR-based benchmark replacements under the LIBOR Act for various contact types. The difference between LIBOR and SOFR is that LIBOR is a forward-looking rate which means the interest rate is set at the beginning of the period with payment due at the end. SOFR is a backward-looking overnight rate, which has implications for how interest and other payments are based.

Debt consists of:

 

2022

2021

Term loans

$64,147,028$71,313,522

Revolving credit loan

64,147,02871,313,522

Less current portion

9,010,7937,500,000
$55,136,231$63,813,522

 

Amounts are net of unamortized discounts and debt issuance costs of $113,769 as of December 31, 2022 and $186,478 as of January 1, 2022.

 

The Company paid interest of $2,502,883 in 2022 and $2,271,818 in 2021.

 

The Company’s loan covenants under the Credit Agreement require the Company to maintain a consolidated fixed charge coverage ratio of at least 1.25 to 1, which is to be tested quarterly on a twelve-month trailing basis. In addition, the Company is required to show a senior net leverage ratio not to exceed 4.25 to 1. The Company was in compliance with all covenants as of December 31, 2022. In addition, the Company has restrictions on, among other things, new capital leases, purchases or redemptions of its capital stock, mergers and divestitures, and new borrowing. The Company was in compliance with all covenants as of December 31, 2022 and January 1, 2022.

 

As of December 31, 2022, scheduled annual principal maturities of long-term debt for each of the next five years follow:

 

2023

9,010,793

2024

55,136,231

Thereafter

$64,147,028