Banks Are Bringing Boots $4.25 Billion Buyout Debt to Market

Banks are looking to sell $2.25 billion of term loans and $2 billion equivalent of bonds for Boots, to help finance its acquisition by US private equity firm Sycamore Partners, according to people familiar with the matter.

The long anticipated sale of the leveraged loans for the UK pharmacy chain launched on Monday and comprises a $1 billion term loan B denominated in euros, $750 million in dollars and $500 million in sterling.

Simultaneously, banks have started marketing senior secured bonds in euros, sterling and dollars as well. They will look to raise $750 million-equivalent each from the euro and sterling tranches and $500 million from the dollar sale.

The deals are part of a larger financing package that will also include private credit facilities to support the takeover of Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc., one of the largest leveraged buyouts since the global financial crisis.

Some 17 banks gained a spot on the buyout financing, work which offers some of the most lucrative fees in investment banking. It comes as a welcome relief after a spate of opportunistic refinancings and repricings that have dominated issuance so far this year, grunt work that pays little and offers no glamor.