Distressed lending
Distressed Lending typically provides credit facilities to borrowers with good cash generation capacity but short-term liquidity issues.
Liquidity Lending versus Collateral Lending
Distressed loans typically take the form of bridge or Mezzanine capital or similar hybrid structures and often place the distressed lender in a better position than existing common shareholders and lenders with respect to company's assets and cashflow.
Distressed Lending versus Asset Backed Lending ("ABL")
Distressed lending can be contrasted with asset backed lending in that ABL typically provides collateralized credit facilities to borrowers with high financial leverage and marginal cash flows. ABL's primary focus is on collateral and liquidity with leverage and cash flow being secondary considerations. Borrowings under an asset-based facility are limited by the collateral base, which is measured by liquidation value of accounts receivable, inventory and fixed assets rather than by reference to direct, ongoing cash generation capacity.
See also
- Finance, Personal finance, Settlement (finance)
- Debt, Consumer debt, Debt consolidation, Government debt
- Bank, Fractional-reserve banking, Building society
- Annual percentage rate (a.k.a. Effective annual rate)
- Default (finance)
- Interest-only loan, Negative amortization, PIK loan
- Loan guarantee
- Loan sale
- Payday loan
- Refund Anticipation Loan
- Stafford loan
- Student loan
- Syndicated loan
- Title loan
- Student loan default
- Credit risk
- Default (finance)
- High-yield debt
- Private equity