Waterfall Payment:

Waterfall Payment:

Waterfall payment structures require that higher-tiered creditors receive interest and principal payments, while the lower-tiered creditors receive principal payments after the higher-tiered creditors are paid back in full. The arrangement for what the company owes each of the creditors is as follows: Creditor A is owed a total of $5 million in interest and $10 million in principal. Creditor B is owed a total of $3 million in interest and $8 million in principal. Creditor C is owed a total of $1 million in interest and $5 million in principal. Waterfall payment structures require that higher-tiered creditors receive interest and principal payments, while the lower-tiered creditors receive principal payments after the higher-tiered creditors are paid back in full. To demonstrate how a waterfall payment scheme works, assume a company has taken loans from three creditors, Creditor A, Creditor B, and Creditor C. Assume the company pays $1 million to Creditor B for interest and $1 million to Creditor B for the principal.

Waterfall payment structures allow higher-tiered creditors to be paid principal and interest ahead of lower-tiered creditors.

What Is a Waterfall Payment?

Waterfall payment structures require that higher-tiered creditors receive interest and principal payments, while the lower-tiered creditors receive principal payments after the higher-tiered creditors are paid back in full. Debtors typically structure these schemes into such tranches to prioritize the highest-principal loans first because they are also likely the most expensive.

Waterfall payment structures allow higher-tiered creditors to be paid principal and interest ahead of lower-tiered creditors.
Lower-tiered creditors are paid interest-only payments until the higher-tiered creditors are paid in full.
Waterfall payments can be structured to pay off one loan at a time or pay all loans in a systematic fashion.

How a Waterfall Payment Works

Imagine a waterfall cascading down into vertically aligned buckets. The water represents money, and the buckets represent creditors. The water fills the first bucket first. The second bucket will fill only after the first is full. As water flows, more buckets are filled in the order in which they appear.

Typically, bucket sizes (size of debt) decrease as the water descends. This is likely because paying off large debts reduces the risk of insolvency and frees up cash for operations, capital expenditures, and investments.

For example, this type of plan works best for a company repaying more than one loan. Assume this company has three operating loans, each with different interest rates. The company makes principal and interest payments on the costliest loan and makes only interest payments on the remaining two. Once the most expensive loan is paid off, the company can make all interest and principal payments on the next, more expensive loan. The process continues until all loans are repaid.

Example of Waterfall Payments

To demonstrate how a waterfall payment scheme works, assume a company has taken loans from three creditors, Creditor A, Creditor B, and Creditor C. The scheme is structured so that Creditor A is the highest-tiered creditor while Creditor C is the lowest-tiered creditor. The arrangement for what the company owes each of the creditors is as follows:

Assume in year one the company earns $17 million. It then pays off the entire $15 million owed to Creditor A, leaving it with $2 million to pay off further debts. Since the priority structure is still in place, this $2 million must be applied to Creditor B. Assume the company pays $1 million to Creditor B for interest and $1 million to Creditor B for the principal. The result after year one is as follows:

If in year two, the company earns $13 million, it could then pay off the remaining obligation to Creditor B and begin paying off Creditor C. The result after year two is as follows:

This example was simplified to show the mechanics of a waterfall payment scheme. In reality, some waterfall schemes are structured so minimum interest payments are made to all tiers during each payment cycle.

Related terms:

Accounting

Accounting is the process of recording, summarizing, analyzing, and reporting financial transactions of a business to oversight agencies, regulators, and the IRS. read more

Bond : Understanding What a Bond Is

A bond is a fixed income investment in which an investor loans money to an entity (corporate or governmental) that borrows the funds for a defined period of time at a fixed interest rate. read more

Debt Consolidation

Debt consolidation is the act of combining several loans or liabilities into one by taking out a new loan to pay off the debts. read more

Note

A note is a financial security that generally has a longer term than a bill but a shorter term than a bond. read more

Paydown

A paydown is a reduction in the total amount of principal debt owed by a company, a government, or an individual. read more

Repayment

Repayment is the act of paying back money borrowed from a lender in accordance with a loan's terms. read more

Subordinated Debt

Subordinated debt (debenture) is a loan or security that ranks below other loans or securities with regard to claims on assets or earnings. read more

Traunch Defined

A traunch is one of a series of payments to be paid out over a specified period of time, subject to certain performance metrics being achieved. read more