For months, creditors of the heavily indebted Florida railroad Brightline have marked July 1 as a critical date. On that day, the company is expected to use its remaining cash to make a bond payment, thereby postponing an official default for the final time.
However, no one can predict exactly what will happen next.
Hedge funds that hold a majority of Brightline's $1.2 billion corporate debt will block any restructuring that does not hand them control, according to sources who requested anonymity because negotiations are private. Assured Guaranty, the insurer supporting $1.1 billion in tax-exempt bonds, has been providing interim loans to keep the railroad running.
The same sources say municipal investors are ready to step into an unusual role: offering top-priority loans that could allow them to acquire the railroad.
Brightline faces interest payments this Wednesday on both its corporate notes and senior municipal bonds, and it has sufficient cash on hand to meet them. However, the company might choose to postpone or withhold some payments, possibly with creditor consent.
Brightline's spokesperson chose not to provide any comment.
Get your free investing masterclass bonus when you join Market Briefs, our free daily newsletter
Who Controls the Restructuring?
At least three groups of bondholders are fighting to provide bankruptcy financing. Each group aims to assume leadership of the restructuring process. No group has convinced the others to agree.
Representing the municipal bondholders are three firms: First Eagle Investments, Invesco Ltd., and Nuveen LLC.
Sources say creditors have long preferred to reorganize Brightline's finances while avoiding court involvement for the train-operating unit, so as to skip mandatory steps like appointing an independent trustee. However, negotiations have become strained as the $5.5 billion debt restructuring looms. Without an agreement, Brightline could be forced into bankruptcy.
The Bigger Picture
Brightline began service between Miami and West Palm Beach in 2018. It extended service to Orlando in 2023. Since its launch, Brightline has consistently missed its performance forecasts.
The company also has a separate West Coast high-speed rail project called Brightline West, connecting Southern California to Las Vegas. That project is estimated to cost $21.5 billion.
Right now, Brightline's Florida operations are struggling to pay their bills. The company is expected to use its remaining cash to make the July 1 coupon payment. That move will stave off an official default for the final time. But it does not solve the larger debt problem.
What to Watch
If the bondholder groups cannot reach a deal before July 1, Brightline could end up in bankruptcy court. Creditors are racing to secure their positions, but with no agreement in sight, the clock is ticking. Brightline is expected to use its remaining reserves to make the July 1 payment, staving off default for the last time.
The railroad's future depends on whether its lenders can settle their differences or force a court-supervised restructuring.
Subscribe to Market Briefs, our free daily newsletter, and claim your bonus investing masterclass
