Payment in Kind (PIK): Meaning, Advantages, and How it Works
Kison Patel
CEO at M&A Science and DealRoom | Revolutionizing Corporate M&A with Innovative Education & Technology Solutions
What is Payment in Kind?
Payment-in-kind (PIK) is the use of a good or service as payment instead of cash. PIK also refers to a financial instrument that pays interest or dividends to investors of bonds, notes, or preferred stock with additional?securities?or?equity?instead of cash. Although technically, the PIK could be any asset with an equivalent value to the notional interest payments, usually the repayment is made by issuing more equity securities in the PIK debt issuer. The only time that cash is paid by the debtor is at the end of the loan when the principal and accrued interest repayments are made in cash.
How Payment in Kind Works
According to the Oxford dictionary, ‘in kind’ means: “in the same way, with something similar.” In the case of interest payment, the company issuing the debt isn’t going to pay with cash, but they’re going to pay?in the same way, with something similar. Hence, payment in kind.
The repayment structures of traditional loans aren’t always convenient for companies with liquidity issues. Many loan structures demand interest repayments one month after the debt has been issued. The company would barely have had time to feel the effects of investing the funds received before payments had to be made.
Enter the PIK loan. Companies with liquidity issues turn to PIK loans as a means of gaining access to cash, without the immediate need for repayment. Although the notional interest payments are significantly higher - owing to the risk of extending a loan to a company that is not cash-generative in the short term - a PIK loan can work for both parties.
Not every company that isn’t cash-generative in the short term is in financial trouble. For example, many companies working upstream in the commodity supply chain face long cash cycles. Some producers wait nine months to convert their output into cash, potentially creating liquidity issues in the short term.
Other features of a PIK loan include:
Why Would a Company Prefer a PIK Loan?
PIK loans are usually preferred by companies with low liquidity or who believe their equity to be over-valued. In the first category - companies with low liquidity - the borrower could be a company with a long cash cycle (as with some producers), or a company in financial difficulty.
PIKs also tend to regularly appear in the following situation:
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There are several forms form of finance most commonly associated with PIK. These include:
An Example of a Payment in Kind
As interest rates begin to rise, and lenders become more careful about which companies they lend to, we can expect a rise in PIK loans.
In April 2022,?Carvana?entered a deal with a private equity investor already invested in the company, Apollo Global Management, to what amounted to a $1.6 billion PIK loan.
The loan in question involved a series of investor-friendly provisions (i.e. non-cash benefits), enabling the cash-tight car dealer to enjoy the benefits of a loan without having to make cash payments in the short term.
Key Takeaways
In summary, payment in kind: