@OP+1qKK3xij I don't work in corporate finance...
$50m of the $460m is a new RCF facility. That should be undrawn and can (probably) be ignored when comparing new debt levels vs old.
That leaves $410m ($350 million first-lien unitranche loan and $60 million in junior notes).
From this existing lenders need paying:
$232m First Lien (as 30 September 2023)
$100m Second Lien
$6m RCF (as of 26 June 2022)
$338m Total
Therefore $72m of "new borrowing" ($338m vs $410m), however...
The First Lien could have been less: $227m not $232m if we made a $5m quarterly payment before the refi closed.
More importantly, the RCF could have been more: The (old) RCF limit was $50/$60m. The $6m balance is 18 months out of date. It's possible that the RCF borrowing was significantly more than the $6m, anywhere up to the $50/60m. It could also have been at zero.
That gives a range of anywhere from $327m to $392m to pay off previous lenders.
Then you've got to add on the FY22 bonus cost.
Assuming an average 10% to 20% bonus paid out against the FY23 $276m "personnel costs" the cash needed to pay the bonus could be anywhere from $27m to $55m.
That takes the finance needed to pay off previous lenders + pay FY22 bonus to between $354m to $447m.
The mid-point of that range is $400m, not too far off the $410m.
Add in some additional extra non-RCF working capital and you get to the $410m.
All this to say, there's probably some "new borrowing" but I wouldn't characterise the debt as having "ballooned". It looks like not much more than the minimum has been taken. Given the refinance struggles, it's probably about as much as was on the table.