Ratings agencies react favorably to RadNet’s $1B debt maneuver
Ratings agencies are reacting favorably to imaging industry giant RadNet’s $1 billion in debt maneuvers.
The Los Angeles-based outpatient chain announced April 3 that it plans to refinance a $679 term loan and $195 revolving credit line. In their place, RadNet Inc. would take on a new $840 million term loan and $250 million credit line, using at least part of the funds to fuel growth initiatives.
Both S&P and Moody’s issued analyses shortly after the announcement, highlighting RadNet’s strong revenue growth, competitive position and liquidity.
“The [company’s] rating also benefits from the long-term trend of imaging volumes migrating away from hospitals to lower cost settings as well as the diversification of revenues through the multi-modality capabilities of RadNet's sites,” Moody’s analysts Adam Chaim and Ola Hannoun-Costa wrote April 3.
S&P said it expects RadNet to use the proceeds to pay off the existing $679 million loan, cover $13 million in transaction fees and increase cash on its balance sheet. Altogether, the company is taking on about $160 million of additional debt with the refinancing. Analysts said the deal will increase RadNet’s debt-to-earnings ratio from 4.4x to 4.8x, but they see leverage decreasing to around 4x over the next year and a half.
S&P maintained its B+ credit rating while highlighting the company’s “decent scale” (with $1.6 billion in annual revenue), “good profitability” (low-20% EBITDA margins), and “strong” revenue growth.
“These are offset by aggressive leverage (generally 4x-5x), an aggressive growth strategy involving substantial spending on growth capital expenditure, and limited barriers to competition,” analysts Richa Deval and David A Kaplan wrote for S&P on April 4.
Both agencies expect RadNet will use cash to fuel expansion, with the company just recently entering Houston and voicing its intent to grow further. Moody’s projected upward of $70 million in annual free cash flow over the next 18 months and $670 million in cash flow following the refinancing. The company will have access to a $250 million undrawn revolving credit line and another $50 million credit facility, with the latter held by RadNet’s New Jersey Imaging Network subsidiary. Annual amortization of loans remains “modest,” at approximately $8 million. But capital expenditure requirements are “material, given the need to maintain expensive diagnostic equipment.”
RadNet bills itself as the leading provider of freestanding, fixed-site outpatient diagnostic imaging services in the U.S. It now owns or operates a network of 377 outpatient centers and counting, concentrated in Arizona, California, Delaware, Florida, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, and Texas.