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by vast
2431 days ago
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It is unfair if a bridge loan is involved. If the preferred stakeholders have the chance they will remove the commons from the equation. In the end both sides take a risk with their shares and it is usually more meaningful to people with little money. |
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The hypothetical bridge loan in this case did earn a profit, but it was a high risk loan. The company was going to be insolvent in 60 days and they hadn't yet found a buyer. The lenders got a multiplier because they risked losing their $10 million loan.
This bridge loan certainly could have been unfair, depending on whether the riskiness was worth the multiplier (for instance, if the company took a loan with 100x multiplier, it would clearly be abusive). If that were the case, the minority shareholders could sue and would win.