253.12—Guaranteed note, U.S. note, and security documents.
(a) Guaranteed note—
(1) Principal.
This may not exceed 80 percent of actual cost, but may, in the Division's credit judgment, be less.
(2) Maturity.
This may not exceed 25 years, but shall not exceed the project property's useful life and may, in the Division's credit judgment, be less.
(4) Prepayment penalty.
The Division will allow a reasonable prepayment penalty, but the guarantor will not guarantee a notemaker's payment of it.
(5) Form.
This will be the simple promissory note (with the guarantee attached) the Division prescribes, promising only to pay principal, interest, and prepayment penalty.
(b) U.S. note and security documents—
(1) Form.
The U.S. note and security documents will be in the form the Division prescribes.
(2) U.S. note.
This exists to evidence the notemaker's actual and contingent liability to the guarantor (contingent if the guarantor does not pay the guaranteed note (including any portion of it), on the notemaker's behalf or if the guarantor does not advance any other amounts or incur any other expenses on the notemaker's behalf to protect the U.S. or accommodate the notemaker; actual if, and to the same monetary extent that, the guarantor does). Payment of the guaranteed note by anyone but the guarantor will amortize the original principal balance (and interest accruing on it) of the U.S. note to the same extent that it amortizes the guaranteed note. The U.S note will, among other things, contain provisions for adding to its principal balance all amounts the Program advances, or expenses it incurs, to protect the U.S. or accommodate the notemaker.
(3) Security documents.
The Division will, at a minimum, require a pledge of all project property (or adequate substitute collateral). The Division will require such other security as it deems the circumstances of each notemaker and project require to protect the U.S. All security documents will secure the U.S. note. The security documents will, among other things, contain provisions for adding to the U.S. note all Program advances, expenditures, and expenses required to protect the U.S. or accommodate the notemaker.
(4) Recourse.
Significant Program reliance, as a secondary means of repayment, on the net worths of parties other than the notemaker will ordinarily require secured recourse against those net worths. Recourse may be by a repayment guarantee or irrevocable letter of credit. Ordinarily, the Division will require recourse against: All major shareholders of a closely-held corporate notemaker, the parent corporation of a subsidiary corporate notemaker without substantial pledged assets other than the project property, and all major limited partners. The Division may also require recourse against others it deems necessary to protect the U.S. The principal parties in interest, who ultimately stand most to benefit from the project, should ordinarily be held financially accountable for the project's performance. Where otherwise appropriate recourse is unavailable, the conservatively projected net liquidating value of the notemaker's assets pledged to the Program must, in the Division's credit judgment, substantially exceed all projected Program exposure.
(c) Dual-use CCF.
For a vessel, the Division may require annually depositing some portion of the project property's net income into a dual-use CCF. A dual-use CCF provides the normal CCF tax-deferral benefits, but also both gives the Program control of CCF withdrawals and recourse against CCF deposits and ensures an emergency refurbishing reserve (tax-deferred) for project property.