
Executive Summary
Debt covenants are often treated as “legal boilerplate.” In reality, covenants are risk controls that determine how much strategic freedom a business retains—and how quickly a liquidity issue can become a refinancing crisis. The wrong covenant package can force defensive decisions (capex cuts, asset sales, emergency equity) even when the underlying business remains viable. The right package creates early-warning signals, preserves covenant headroom, and provides cure tools that keep management in control. In this article (Part 4 of Dawgen Global’s C.A.P.I.T.A.L. Architecture™ series), we explain the covenants that truly matter, the difference between maintenance vs incurrence tests, and how Dawgen engineers covenant structures that protect both lenders and borrowers—without strangling performance.
Why Covenants Are Strategic (Not Just Legal)
Covenants are the “operating system” of a financing agreement. They influence:
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Liquidity flexibility (what you can draw, when, and under what conditions)
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Strategic actions (acquisitions, capex, dividends, related-party transactions)
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Refinancing options (what you can refinance, prepay, or reprice)
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Distress dynamics (how quickly lenders gain leverage, and what triggers default)
A covenant breach is not simply a technical event—it is a negotiating event. It shifts power, pricing, and timelines. That’s why Dawgen treats covenants as a core pillar of capital structure design.
The Two Covenant Worlds: Maintenance vs Incurrence
Maintenance Covenants (Common in Loans)
These are tested regularly (monthly/quarterly) regardless of whether the borrower takes new actions.
Typical maintenance covenants include:
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Leverage ratio (Net Debt / EBITDA)
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Interest cover (EBITDA / Net Interest)
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DSCR (Debt Service Coverage Ratio)
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FCCR (Fixed Charge Coverage Ratio)
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Minimum liquidity or minimum cash balance
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Working capital or current ratio (less common in sophisticated deals)
What they do well:
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Provide early warning and regular performance monitoring
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Enable lenders to intervene earlier when risk rises
The risk for borrowers:
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Even temporary volatility can trigger a breach
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Tight headroom can force amendments at the worst time
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A covenant breach can become a leverage point for repricing
Incurrence Covenants (Common in Bonds / Notes)
These are tested only when a borrower attempts a specified action (incur additional debt, pay dividends, make acquisitions).
Typical incurrence tests include:
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Debt incurrence limitations
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Restricted payments limitations (dividends, share buybacks)
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Liens and asset sales tests
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Affiliate transactions restrictions
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Change of control / put provisions
What they do well:
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Provide operational freedom during normal volatility
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Focus restrictions on major actions rather than quarterly fluctuations
The risk for borrowers:
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Less frequent “warning signals” (discipline must be internal)
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If leverage quietly rises, refinancing may become harder later
Dawgen insight: Covenant style should match the business risk profile. Highly cyclical cashflows + tight maintenance tests is a predictable recipe for renegotiation.
The Covenants That Actually Matter (And Why)
Not all covenants have equal impact. Dawgen focuses on those that directly drive control and optionality.
1) Leverage Covenant (Net Debt / EBITDA)
Why it matters:
This is often the primary constraint in loan facilities. It also influences the borrower’s ability to refinance, incur additional debt, or pursue acquisitions.
Common pitfalls:
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EBITDA definition too strict (no add-backs for one-offs, startup costs, restructuring)
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No cure rights or too small a cure basket
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Headroom calibrated to a “perfect year” rather than a realistic cycle
Dawgen approach:
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Calibrate headroom across base and downside scenarios
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Align EBITDA definitions with the business model
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Use step-downs and cure mechanics responsibly
2) Debt Service / Interest Coverage (DSCR or EBITDA/Interest)
Why it matters:
This covenant reflects actual “ability to pay,” especially in rising-rate environments.
Common pitfalls:
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Floating-rate exposure not considered
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FX mismatch increases interest and principal burden
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Short-term liquidity drains (working capital) ignored
Dawgen approach:
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Model coverage under rate and FX shocks
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Pair covenant design with hedging policy where appropriate
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Avoid covenant structures that punish seasonal working capital swings
3) Minimum Liquidity Covenant
Why it matters:
Liquidity is often the first failure point in a stress scenario. A minimum liquidity test can protect the lender—while also protecting the borrower by forcing earlier action.
Common pitfalls:
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Set too high (becomes a constant constraint)
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Set without recognising seasonality and cash timing
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Defined narrowly (cash only) rather than cash + committed lines
Dawgen approach:
Define liquidity thoughtfully (cash + undrawn committed facilities), calibrated to working-capital volatility.
4) Restrictions on Additional Debt (Debt Incurrence / Debt Baskets)
Why it matters:
This determines future flexibility: can the company raise incremental debt for capex or acquisitions?
Common pitfalls:
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Baskets too small; no “grower” baskets
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Debt definitions too broad (capturing trade finance or leases unnecessarily)
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No carve-outs for refinancing
Dawgen approach:
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Ensure refinancing baskets are clear and usable
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Create add-on capacity with guardrails (incremental facilities, leverage-based baskets)
5) Restricted Payments (Dividends, Distributions, Buybacks)
Why it matters:
This aligns capital allocation discipline with creditor protection.
Common pitfalls:
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Blocks distributions even when leverage is low and cashflows are strong
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No builder basket or performance-based step-ups
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Overly restrictive for owner-managed businesses that rely on distributions
Dawgen approach:
Use performance-linked mechanics: distributions permitted as leverage falls and liquidity remains strong.
6) Asset Sales and Lien Covenants
Why it matters:
These govern how the balance sheet can be reshaped—selling assets, pledging collateral, or raising secured debt later.
Common pitfalls:
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Asset sale proceeds trapped
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Sweeps required at inconvenient times
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Liens covenant blocks legitimate secured refinancing
Dawgen approach:
Build flexibility: reinvestment rights, reasonable sweep thresholds, and a collateral strategy aligned to the long-term capital plan.
7) Change of Control, Cross-Default, and MAC Clauses
Why they matter:
These are “hidden accelerators” that can bring forward default and shift leverage instantly.
Common pitfalls:
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Cross-default linked to small obligations
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Change of control triggers too broad
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MAC clauses with ambiguous interpretation
Dawgen approach:
Tighten definitions and thresholds to avoid accidental triggers while preserving genuine lender protection.
Covenant Headroom: The Dawgen Calibration Method
Covenant headroom is not a “nice-to-have.” It is a measurable buffer.
Dawgen typically models:
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Base, downside, and severe-downside performance
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Interest rate + FX shock overlays
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Working capital stress (receivables stretching, inventory build)
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Capex floor and tax reality
Outcome: a covenant package that remains compliant under realistic stress—reducing renegotiation risk and protecting enterprise value.
Cure Tools and Flexibility Mechanisms (What Borrowers Need)
A resilient covenant package includes mechanisms that prevent one bad quarter from becoming a crisis:
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Equity cure rights (limited and controlled)
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Covenant holidays during refinancing or transformations
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Step-downs as leverage reduces
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Add-backs for genuine one-offs (with caps and definitions)
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Grower baskets that expand with EBITDA or asset growth
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Amend-and-extend pathways built into the relationship plan
Dawgen principle: Flexibility is not “weakness.” It is a design feature that prevents value destruction.
Case Study (Illustrative, Anonymised)
A regional business had a strong market position but volatile working capital. Its facility had tight leverage tests and limited EBITDA add-backs. A temporary receivables slowdown caused a covenant breach, prompting repricing and tighter terms—despite underlying profitability.
Dawgen redesign:
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Replace tight leverage covenant with a more relevant cashflow metric
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Introduce a minimum liquidity framework aligned to seasonality
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Add cure rights and a small covenant holiday mechanism
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Clarify EBITDA definitions and acceptable add-backs with caps
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Maintain lender protection through reporting and early-warning triggers
Result: fewer renegotiation events, improved lender confidence, and greater strategic control.
Key Takeaways
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Covenants drive control and optionality—treat them as strategic design.
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Maintenance covenants provide early warning but require realistic headroom.
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Incurrence covenants provide freedom but require disciplined internal monitoring.
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The right covenant package balances creditor protection with borrower resilience.
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Headroom and cure tools prevent volatility from becoming value destruction.
Next Step: Engineer Covenants That Protect Value
Dawgen Global helps organisations review, negotiate, and redesign covenant packages—so financing protects enterprise value and supports strategy.
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