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Debt
9 Months Ended
Sep. 30, 2022
Debt Disclosure [Abstract]  
Debt Debt
Our Credit Agreement, dated July 1, 2021 (the "Credit Agreement") contains (i) a $100 million, five-year undrawn revolving credit facility, (ii) a $150 million five-year delayed draw amortizing term loan ("Term Loan A-1") and (iii) a $150 million seven-year delayed draw amortizing term loan ("Term Loan A-2"). The following loans were outstanding under the Credit Agreement:

(in thousands)September 30,
2022
December 31,
2021
Term loan A-1$12,500 $— 
Term loan A-212,500 — 
Total debt25,000 — 
Less: unamortized loan fees26 — 
Total debt, net of unamortized loan fees$24,974 $— 

On July 1, 2022, the Company borrowed $12.5 million against both Term Loan A-1 and Term Loan A-2 for a total of $25.0 million.

Both Term Loan A-1 and Term Loan A-2 bear interest at one-month LIBOR plus a margin of 1.50%. The interest rate was 4.64% at September 30, 2022. Our cash payments for interest were $0.2 million and $10.4 million during the nine months ended September 30, 2022 and 2021, respectively.

The Credit Agreement includes various covenants, including total net leverage ratio and debt service coverage ratio financial covenants.
The International Exchange (ICE) Benchmark Administration ceased the publication of one-week and two-month LIBOR on December 31, 2021 and expects to phase-out the remaining tenors (overnight, one-month, three-month, six-month and 12-month) on June 30, 2023. Our term loans and revolver identify LIBOR as a reference rate for tenors ceasing on June 30, 2023 and maturing after 2023. 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. 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 and the manner in which an alternative reference rate will apply, we cannot yet reasonably estimate the expected financial impact of the LIBOR transition. Any changes to the reference rate will be agreed through an amendment to the Credit Agreement and are expected to reference the Secured Overnight Financing Rate, though the timing of such amendment and applicability to any future amounts owed under the Credit Agreement are not certain at this time.