- Loans can be bigger and used to pay pre-existing debt
- Critics say shift in lending caters to oil industry needs
The
Larger, more heavily indebted companies can now qualify and use the money to pay off prior loans under
The move opens the door to more oil and gas producers, said Senator
“With the decrease in demand and oversupply due to the global oil price war creating a valley for these highly leveraged companies, this expansion will help them bridge the gap as we look to reopen America,” Cramer said in an emailed statement Thursday.
Environmentalists blasted the shifts they said rewarded oil companies that took on too much debt and were overproducing crude even before the coronavirus pandemic caused demand to plunge.
“These changes directly reflect demands from polluters and their favorite members of Congress,” said Lukas Ross with the environmental group
For weeks, oil industry advocates have warned the original program structure would prevent beleaguered drillers from accessing capital under the program.
Senator
Maximum loan totals under the Main Street program are also being hiked to $200 million -- from an earlier $150 million cap viewed as too low to help oil producers.
“Great news out of the Fed today in support of struggling U.S. energy companies,” Energy Secretary
The Fed said the changes were not targeted to the oil and gas industry or any industry in particular but followed additional research into what slice of U.S. companies don’t have ready access to capital markets.
Nevertheless, the new terms are likely to open it up to a wider group of energy firms, and overseers worried the Fed was bending to pressure.
“The major changes announced today mirror the top requests of the oil and gas industry,” said
“That raises questions about how the changes promote the broader public interest -- especially when these companies will still have no real obligation to retain or rehire their workers,” Ramamurti said on Twitter.
Credit Ratings
Even before the changes, oil and gas companies with investment-grade credit ratings could secure funding through a separate program, the Fed’s Primary and Secondary Market Corporate Credit Facilities.
However, under term sheets released April 9, funding was restricted to firms that had credit ratings of at least BBB-/Baa3 as of March 22 -- a cutoff date that could come too late for some oil producers, such as
Republicans have argued that funding should be available to oil companies with credit ratings that slipped amid the coronavirus pandemic and a surge in crude unleashed by a Russia-Saudi Arabia battle for market share.
On Thursday, the Fed said lenders now will be able to apply their “industry-specific expertise and underwriting standards to best measure a borrower’s income.”
Highly leveraged companies also can take advantage of a new, third loan option that comes with increased risk sharing by lenders.
It was not clear Thursday whether the changes would allow Occidental to qualify for aid -- or whether potentially newly eligible oil companies would seek it. Occidental declined to comment on the matter.
The Fed’s approach to tweaking the Main Street loan program avoids creating an oil industry-specific initiative that could be unpopular with the public or require approval from Congress, where Democrats are deeply opposed.
Fed emergency facilities are by law required to be broad-based, which in the central bank’s view prohibits lending aid to specific industries.
The oil industry itself has been split over government aid targeted to the sector. While some smaller, independent producers and their trade groups have clamored for government loans, the idea of industry-targeted aid has drawn resistance from larger, multinational oil companies better able to ride the rout as well as their top lobbying group, the American Petroleum Institute.
Industry opponents of targeted loans are concerned that taking taxpayer money now could cost them political capital in Washington and be used by drilling foes against the sector later.
“You can’t have capitalism on the way up and socialism on the way down,” said
(Corrects spelling in final paragraph)
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