Dec
18

was forced to drop the sale price of its commercial supply by nearly $2 billion yesterday, according to people involved in the negotiations, one of the first big buyouts to be renegotiated as a result of the recent tightening of credit and problems in the .

The refashioned deal cut the sale price roughly 18 percent, to $8.5 billion. Because the deal relies heavily on debt, and bankers have been watching it closely for signs of how new limits on credit could affect other large buyouts that are still pending and are worth nearly $400 billion collectively.

Still, this deal is in that the fortunes of Supply, as the division is called, are tied closely to the , which has also been weakening.

After a series of all-night negotiations to save the deal, and the participating banks and buyout firms were all forced to put up more money to shore up the . The involved in other pending deals could find themselves in a similar position as buyout firms drag sellers back to the negotiating table. That could put a damper on the buyout boom that has been a major factor in the runup in prices over the last few years.

board approved the deal in a meeting yesterday afternoon, people involved in the negotiations said, and the plans to announce the transaction today.

The deal involves some of Wall Streets biggest players. The buying consortium the , Bain Capital and Clsyton Dubilier %26 Rice, and the banks the deal include Lehman Brothers, JPMorgan Chase and Merrill Lynch.

The reworked transaction raised the curtain on the complicated relationships between investment banks and some of their biggest clients: the private equity firms who shower them with billions of dollars in fees annually. In the negotiations, however, those normally friendly relationships quickly turned cold, as all the players eventually demanded heavy concessions from one another.

By the time � reached its agreement, some of Wall Street�s most powerful executives had stepped in to personally negotiate the deal:

James Dimon, chief executive of JPMorgan Chase, pulled several all-nighters, ordering in pizza with his colleague, James B. Lee, a vice chairman; Richard S. Fuld Jr., the chief executive of Lehman Brothers, was sending e-mail messages from his BlackBerry at 5 a.m.; and E. Stanley Neal, chief executive of Merrill Lynch, was taking calls on the golf course, against the clubs rules.

Kenneth D. Langone, a prominent board member and a fixture on Wall Street, found himself uncharacteristically locking horns with some of his good friends. And even John F. Welch Jr., the former chief executive, was brought in by Clayton Dubilier, where he works as an adviser.

As part of the deal, each buyout firm increased the amount of equity that it will commit to the deal by $150 million each, to $800 million. In a major concession to the banks, agreed to finance $1 billion of debt and take up to 12.5 percent of the equity in the supply .

What has emerged is a tale of bare-knuckled brinksmanship, as the three private equity buyers Bain, Carlyle and Clayton Dubilier initially demanded concessions from .

In announcing the possible repricing of the sale earlier this month, said it would trim the price it was offering in a buyback, initially worth about $22.5 billion.

Even so, the buyout firms threatened to walk away from the deal, declaring that the �s decline had created what is known as a material adverse change. Such clauses are common in deals, allowing buyers to walk away. In this case, however, it was not clear whether the declines in the housing and qualified as deal breakers.

Still, buckled and agreed to lower the price to about $9 billion. Then the three investment banks demanded a better deal as well, setting off a marathon of conference calls as the banks threatened to walk away from their commitments.

By balking at the transaction, Lehman Brothers put itself in an especially difficult position. One of Lehman�s most senior bankers, Andrew Taussig, had advised on the sale at the same time that it was also providing to the buying group. Suddenly, Lehman was turning around and threatening to scuttle a deal it had advised one of its most important clients to accept.

Mr. Fuld, Lehman�s chief executive, spent hours in person and on the phone with �s management and some of its directors trying to explain the firm�s position. Mr. Taussig was mortified, people briefed on the negotiations said.

Because of Lehman�s conflicted position, Goldman Sachs was brought in as �s new adviser to mediate among the private equity firms and other banks to reach a deal.

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