Businesses conduct a corporate restructuring for either operational or financial reasons, (sometimes both). Operationally, they are seeking to make the business more efficient and profitable. Financially, they wish to raise cash and decrease debt.
Finance role
No matter if it’s for financial or operational needs, finance providers may offer funds as either loans or investment to support businesses during a restructuring:
Manage debt and cover restructuring costs
Businesses may restructure their current debts, and cover other restructuring costs by refinancing debts to achieve improved terms, securing new loans against company assets or their sales book, or taking on new investment. Common solutions include:
Business loans: Work like regular bank loans, may be secured or unsecured. Take out as new funding or to refinance existing debt.
Revolving credit facilities: An agreed credit pot that businesses may dip into as and when funds are needed. Pay off existing debt, cover merger expenses, joint ventures, and partnerships.
Asset finance and refinance: Pays for plant and machinery to help businesses operate more efficiently, or to free up the sunk capital in hard assets that the business already owns.
Commercial mortgages: Depending on the Loan To Value of the property, (LTV), borrow against your business premises. Use the funds to clear high-priced or overdue debt.
Development finance: Funds to pay for reconstruction, refurbishment and expansion of business premises. Get stalled projects working again. Add value to your asset book.
Equity finance: Pay off outstanding debt with new investment funds. Secure the cash you need in exchange for a share of ownership
Management buyout finance: Use to spin-off a company, division, business unit, or a brand.
Improve cashflow
Poor cashflow is the single biggest reason many SMEs fail. Improving cashflow can take the pressure off debt payments and help to maintain good relations with creditors. Common solutions include:
Invoice finance: Instead of waiting 30, 60, 90 days or more for payment, borrow against the value of your unpaid invoices and get paid as soon as the bills are raised.
Working capital loans: Sometimes, it’s the little things that cause big problems. Poor cashflow can leave organisations struggling to pay for basic needs such as energy, rent and wages. Working capital loans can cover everyday expenses, keep the lights on, keep your business trading.
Consolidation role
Depending on the restructuring strategy, organisations may seek to consolidate production facilities, distribution networks, product lines, workforce resources, even the debts they carry. This will usually reduce overhead and provide the necessary cash to put the business on a solid footing. Consolidation is particularly common during M&A, reverse merger, and joint venture restructurings. Using a mix of the financial solutions shown above, consolidation finance may be used to:
- Consolidate debts into more manageable payments and on improved terms.
- Cover the costs of workforce refinement and reduction.
- Absorb the expenses of relocation or closing down production sites.
- Streamline distribution networks and supply chains.
- Retire underperforming products and services.