Private Equity GP and Employee Co-Investment Credit Facilities, Management Lines of Credit
Due Diligence, Structuring and Documentation; Role of Sponsor, Administrative Issues

Course Details
- smart_display Format
On-Demand
- signal_cellular_alt Difficulty Level
- work Practice Area
Banking and Finance
- event Date
Thursday, April 14, 2022
- schedule Time
1:00 p.m. ET./10:00 a.m. PT
- timer Program Length
90 minutes
-
This 90-minute webinar is eligible in most states for 1.5 CLE credits.
The CLE course will outline the key considerations in structuring management lines of credit, general partner (GP) financing, and employee co-investment facilities within private equity funds. The panel will discuss collateral security packages, fund obligations, administrative concerns, common points of lender diligence, and the impact that each of these types of transactions may have on a fund's subscription facility.
Faculty

Mr. Lawlor is a member of the Financial Industry Group. His practice includes representation of lenders and borrowers in commercial finance matters and of issuers, underwriters and credit enhancers in taxable and tax exempt debt offerings. Mr. Lawlor has extensive and diverse experience in public, securitized and project financings. He has served as bond, underwriter, bank and borrower counsel in bond issuances, and as both lender's and borrower's counsel on syndicated and bilateral bank credit agreements. A significant portion of Mr. Lawlor’s practice involves finance transactions in the healthcare, communications and media, energy, higher education, non-profit, and transportation industries.

Ms. Kohen concentrates her practice on representing financial sponsors in connection with debt financings for their private equity, real estate, energy, infrastructure, credit and other investment funds. She has extensive experience in complicated financings designed to provide fund-level leverage to facilitate and support investment activities, as well as management lines and co-investment loan programs. Ms. Kohen regularly advises on a wide variety of financings crucial to the formation and ongoing operations of investment funds, including subscription (or capital call) facilities secured by uncalled capital commitments and related rights, with borrowing base capacity for the fund, as well as its parallel funds, alternative investment vehicles and portfolio companies; unsecured demand lines with an uncalled capital coverage requirement; fund guarantees of portfolio level investments; letter of credit facilities, NAV-based facilities and hybrid variations, including facilities provided as aftercare facilities for funds; co-investment loan programs made available, directly or indirectly, to employees and partners and secured by their fund interests; and general partner facilities and management lines provided to investment advisors for working capital purposes. In addition, Ms. Kohen has co-authored chapters in several editions of Global Legal Insights’ Fund Finance guide, which covers legal trends and developments in the greater fund finance market and provides law firms, financial institutions, funds and investors with comprehensive insight.
Description
As the subscription facility market has grown, fund sponsors seek other means of liquidity for their businesses and their investment professionals, and lenders seek to expand their product offerings to the sponsor. These products include working capital facilities secured by management fee income, co-investment lines of credit for employees to finance their fund interests, and GP facilities that invest GP obligations to fund capital contributions.
A management line of credit often takes the form of a "revolver" that provides liquidity to the fund manager between quarterly fees. Collateral typically includes the management fees collected and the depository bank accounts of such fees. In its due diligence, counsel must review each management agreement to understand how fees are calculated when paid and the assets under management and identify any management entity that should be joined as a credit party.
Employee co-investment facilities are typically arranged and managed by the fund sponsor on behalf of participating employees. These facilities can require a significant amount of time and expense for the sponsor. The lender must conduct due diligence to assess the creditworthiness of each borrower, and counsel must document relationships between the lender, sponsor employees, fund, GP, and any other applicable sponsor entities, each of which has distinct interests.
In GP financing, the lender may require that the GP grant a lien on its interest in the underlying fund. Most fund agreements prohibit its GP from "transferring" its general partnership interest. To solve this issue, the limited partnership agreement may be amended to bifurcate the GP's interest into a general partnership interest and a limited partnership interest. Care must be taken to avoid any conflict of interest with the fund when negotiating pricing and other terms of a partner loan program.
Listen as our authoritative panel discusses the structuring and documentation of GP and employee co-investment credit facilities and management lines of credit and the issues associated with each.
Outline
- The impetus behind co-investment credit facilities for the sponsor and lender
- Management line of credit
- Collateral: points of contention
- Due diligence of manager and management agreement(s)
- Deal terms
- Employee co-investment facilities
- Role of sponsor
- Due diligence of individual borrowers
- Employee departures and other administrative issues
- Documentation
- GP financing
- Issues associated with the pledge of partnership interest: bifurcation into GP and LP interests
- Ensuring continued compliance with fund agreement and fund credit facilities
- Potential conflicts of interest
Benefits
The panel will review these and other relevant issues:
- What are the key deal terms and points of contention in negotiating management lines of credit?
- What are the preferred alternatives for structuring employee co-investment facilities?
- How should a sponsor handle the departure of a key employee who is a party to a credit facility? What should the documents say?
- What are the benefits of bifurcating the GP's interest into a general partnership and limited partnership interest? Is it necessary?
Unlimited access to premium CLE courses:
- Annual access
- Available live and on-demand
- Best for attorneys and legal professionals
Unlimited access to premium CPE courses.:
- Annual access
- Available live and on-demand
- Best for CPAs and tax professionals
Unlimited access to premium CLE, CPE, Professional Skills and Practice-Ready courses.:
- Annual access
- Available live and on-demand
- Best for legal, accounting, and tax professionals
Related Courses

Structuring Uptier and Drop-Down Financing Transactions: Crafting Loan Terms to Manage Exposure and Mitigate Risks
Thursday, May 29, 2025
1:00 p.m. ET./10:00 a.m. PT
Recommended Resources
Making Continuing Education Work for You, Anytime, Anywhere
- Learning & Development
- Career Advancement