Company: WBI
Filing Date: 2025-08-04
Form Type: DRS/A
Source: 0000950123-25-006924
Chunk: 91

Company: WaterBridge Infrastructure LLC
Filing Date: 2025-08-04
Form: DRS/A
Chunk 91
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, including capital expenditures and dividend payments;

restricting us from exploiting business opportunities and making strategic acquisitions;

making it more difficult to satisfy our financial obligations, including payments on our indebtedness, and contractual and commercial commitments;

disadvantaging us when compared to our competitors that have less debt;

complying with covenants contained in the documents governing such indebtedness may require us to meet or maintain certain financial tests, which may affect our flexibility in planning for, and reacting to, changes in our industry, such as being able to take advantage of acquisition opportunities when they arise; and

increasing our borrowing costs or otherwise limiting our ability to borrow additional funds for the execution of our business strategy.

Finally, the agreements governing our outstanding indebtedness limit our ability to incur additional debt, but such agreements do not prohibit us from doing so. As a result, we could incur more indebtedness in the future, which would exacerbate the foregoing risks.

We are subject to interest rate risk, which may cause our debt service obligations to increase significantly. The weighted average interest rate on borrowings outstanding under our existing credit facilities as of June 30, 2025, on a pro forma basis, was 8.15% in the case of revolving credit borrowings and 8.83% in the case of term loan borrowings.

Borrowings under our credit facilities bear interest at variable rates and expose us to interest rate risk. The weighted average interest rate on our borrowings outstanding under our credit facilities as of June 30, 2025, on a pro forma basis, was 8.15% in the case of revolving credit borrowings and 8.83% in the case of term loan borrowings. If interest rates increase, our debt service obligations on the variable rate indebtedness would increase even if the amount borrowed remained the same, and we would be required to devote more of our cash flow to servicing our indebtedness.

In March 2022, the Federal Reserve began, and continued through 2023, to raise interest rates in an effort to curb inflation. Although the Federal Reserve reduced benchmark interest rates in 2024, we may continue to experience further financing cost increases if interest rates on borrowings, credit facilities and debt offerings increase compared to previous levels. Changes in interest rates, either positive or negative, may also affect the yield requirements of investors who invest in our Class A shares, and the elevated interest rate environment could have an adverse impact on the price of our Class A shares, or our ability to issue equity