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Toggle (or PIK toggle) meaning

What does Toggle (or PIK toggle) mean?
A toggle (or pik toggle) is a loan or bond feature that permits the borrower/issuer to switch interest payments for a period from cash-pay to payment-in-kind (PIK), so interest accrues, is capitalised to principal and compounds rather than being paid in cash. It is common in mezzanine facilities, unitranche and holding company PIK loans, and in PIK-toggle notes. The term is a market expression, not defined in legislation or case law, and is used consistently across England & Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland and Ireland. Typically documented in a facility or credit agreement, the toggle is an election right for the borrower, sometimes limited to set interest periods and subject to conditions such as: no event of default or drawstop, compliance with financial covenants, a cap on the number of toggles, and advance notice. A margin step-up usually applies while PIK is elected. Structures may allow a split between cash and PIK interest. Practical significance: toggling preserves liquidity when cashflow is tight but increases debt through capitalised interest, affecting leverage, covenant headroom, pricing and future refinancing risk. Lender consent mechanics and any restrictions at senior level should be checked.
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View the related Practice Notes about Toggle (or PIK toggle)

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PRACTICE NOTES
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