The market for Calpine Corp.'s $750 million second-lien term loan may be starting to climb back up into the 90s, but the 12-point drop in the levels within weeks of allocation has left some investors pointing an annoyed finger at Goldman Sachs, the sole lead arranger for the $3.3 billion debt transaction. Investors complained that the deal was increased by too much, that Goldman stuffed accounts full of the paper and did not support the new deal in the secondary market. "Clearly, there was disconnect between how the deal was marketed to us and how the deal was completed," said a buysider. But some investors admitted that the economic impact is the real source of the complaints. "Honestly, we're not happy because we lost money," said another investor. An official at Goldman declined to comment. Calls to Steve Hickey, head of Goldman's U.S. loan trading team, were referred to a loan sales official, who did not return calls by press time. Rick Barraza, Calpine's v.p. of investor relations, declined to comment on the story.
August 18, 2003