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Long-Term Debt
6 Months Ended
Jun. 30, 2020
Debt Disclosure [Abstract]  
Long-Term Debt Long-Term Debt

Our syndicated Credit Agreement includes a $75 million, five-year undrawn revolving credit facility, as well as the following outstanding term loans:
(in thousands)
June 30,
2020
 
December 31,
2019
Term loan A-1
$
244,004

 
$
258,571

Term loan A-2
470,975

 
473,469

 
714,979

 
732,040

Less: unamortized loan fees
10,689

 
11,926

Total debt, net of unamortized loan fees
$
704,290

 
$
720,114



Term Loan A-1 bears interest at one-month LIBOR plus a margin of 1.50%, while Term Loan A-2 bears interest at one-month LIBOR plus a margin of 1.75%. LIBOR resets monthly. Our cash payments for interest were $10.3 million and $14.5 million during the six months ended June 30, 2020 and 2019, respectively.

As shown below, as of June 30, 2020, the Company was in compliance with the financial covenants in its credit agreements.
 
 
Actual
 
Covenant Requirement
Total leverage ratio
2.3

 
3.25
or Lower
Debt service coverage ratio
5.7

 
2.00
or Higher
Minimum liquidity balance (in millions)
$
218.5

 
$25.0
or Higher


Rate quotations provided by a group of banks that sustain LIBOR will no longer be required after 2021. As a result, it is uncertain whether LIBOR will continue to be quoted after 2021. Our term loans and interest rate swaps identify LIBOR as a reference rate and mature after 2021. Alternative reference rates that replace LIBOR may not yield the same or similar economic results over the terms of the financial instruments. The transition from LIBOR could result in us paying higher or lower interest rates on our current LIBOR-indexed term loans, affect the fair value of the derivative instruments we hold, or affect our ability to effectively use interest rate swaps to manage interest rate risk. Our Credit Agreement includes provisions that provide for the identification of a LIBOR replacement rate. Due to the uncertainty regarding the transition from LIBOR-indexed financial instruments, including when it will happen, and the manner in which an alternative reference rate will apply, we cannot yet reasonably estimate the expected financial impact of the LIBOR transition.