A syndicate of unnamed banks has committed $7.15 billion in leveraged debt to finance the take-private of Sealed Air Corporation, the New Jersey packaging concern with $5.5 billion in trailing revenue. The debt quantum emerged in regulatory disclosures this week, marking the largest packaging-sector LBO financing since the Pregis acquisition in late 2021. No sponsor name has surfaced in public filings, though the debt structure—senior secured term loans and a revolver—suggests private equity rather than strategic interest.
Sealed Air trades protective packaging and food-safety materials to industrial and food-service customers. The company holds 18 percent operating margins and generates roughly $1.1 billion in annual EBITDA, implying a gross leverage multiple near 6.5 times if the entire debt package funds the equity purchase. That multiple sits at the upper boundary of what credit committees have approved in the past eighteen months, when median sponsor-backed LBOs closed at 5.8 times EBITDA. The financing arrived during a two-week window in which high-yield spreads compressed 40 basis points and the leveraged loan market cleared $18 billion in new issuance, the busiest fortnight since September.
The timing matters because the credit window has been narrow and the packaging sector carries two specific risks that make lenders cautious. First, Sealed Air's customer base tilts toward discretionary food service and e-commerce fulfillment, both of which have shown volume declines in the past four quarters as consumers pull back on delivery frequency. Second, the company's raw material costs—resins and polymers—remain elevated and volatile, compressing gross margins by 120 basis points year-over-year even as pricing power has held. A $7.15 billion debt load leaves little room for margin compression if resin prices spike or if fulfillment volumes continue their slide. The financing also signals that sponsors are willing to stretch leverage in sectors where they see defensible market share and pricing power, even when the underlying end markets are softening.
Allocators should watch three developments over the next sixty days. First, whether a sponsor name surfaces in amended filings or whether the debt package finances a management-led buyout, which would explain the absence of a public bidder. Second, whether the syndicate places the debt privately or attempts a broader distribution into the institutional loan market, which would test appetite for high-leverage packaging credits. Third, whether Sealed Air's $1.2 billion in existing bonds trade wider on the news, which would indicate concern about structural subordination or covenant quality in the new capital structure. If spreads hold, the deal will embolden other sponsors sitting on signed LOIs in the industrials complex.
The $7.15 billion financing is the clearest signal yet that the credit markets will accommodate leverage multiples above 6 times for companies with recurring revenue and operational scale, even in sectors facing volume headwinds.