The Debt Picture Gets Worse
Getty's balance sheet resembles a balloon inflated entirely with borrowed money. As of March 31, 2026, the photo-archive company had $1.9 billion in total debt. That is a heavy load for any business. Each year, Getty must pay roughly $86 million just to service that debt.
The company also has a revolving credit facility - a type of flexible loan that lets it borrow, repay, and borrow again. Getty had used all but $30 million of its $150 million credit line. That facility matures on May 4, 2028. For a company with little room to breathe, that deadline is not far away.
This is like a swimmer who dropped their life vest just before hitting rough water. The cash Getty counted on from the merger is gone. Lenders now see a higher chance they will not get paid back.
S&P Sounds the Alarm
S&P Global Ratings, a credit rating agency that judges how likely a company is to repay its debts, lowered Getty's rating from B to CCC+. CCC+ is a junk rating. It means the company is vulnerable and depends on good business conditions to keep paying.
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S&P did not mince words. The rating agency directly warned of a "distressed debt restructuring or default" in its report. That is not a prediction. It is a real risk.
What Getty Plans to Do Next
Getty is not sitting still. The company plans to hire an adviser to find alternative financing, according to regulatory filings. That could mean trying to borrow more money or reworking its current loans.
Meanwhile, lenders are organizing. The law firm Gibson Dunn & Crutcher LLP is advising them. This is a sign that creditors are preparing for trouble. When lenders hire lawyers, they are often thinking about what happens if the borrower cannot pay.
Getty Images did not provide a comment when contacted.
Background on the Blocked Merger
The $162 million cash benefit Getty had expected from the Shutterstock merger would have helped reduce its debt burden. Without that infusion, the company faces tighter liquidity and higher refinancing risk. Lenders are now forming a group to protect their interests, a common step when a borrower's financial health deteriorates. The cancellation of the deal leaves Getty with no near-term catalyst to improve its balance sheet, and its revolving credit facility matures in just over two years.
What to Watch
Lenders will be watching closely to see if Getty can secure new financing before the pressure builds further.
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