Asset-Based Lending: How It Works in Business Acquisitions
Asset-based lending (ABL) is financing where the loan amount is determined by the value of specific business assets, not primarily by the business's cash flow. The lender advances a percentage of eligible accounts receivable, inventory, and equipment — and the borrower can draw against that revolving base as assets fluctuate.
ABL is common in distribution, manufacturing, staffing, and other businesses with significant working capital assets. In acquisitions, it can complement or replace cash-flow-based financing (like SBA loans) when the target business has a strong asset base but irregular earnings.
How the Borrowing Base Works
The borrowing base is the calculation that determines how much a borrower can draw at any given time:
- Accounts receivable: typically 80%–85% of eligible receivables (those less than 90 days old, from non-related-party customers)
- Inventory: typically 50%–65% of eligible inventory (finished goods or raw materials; not work-in-progress)
- Equipment: typically 75%–85% of orderly liquidation value, often structured as a term loan rather than a revolving line
If a business has $1M in eligible receivables and $500K in eligible inventory, a typical ABL facility might provide: ($1M × 85%) + ($500K × 55%) = $850K + $275K = $1.125M available. As receivables are collected and new ones are created, the available balance fluctuates.
ABL in Acquisitions
Buyers can use ABL in a business acquisition in several ways:
- Acquisition financing: an ABL term loan against equipment provides acquisition capital, alongside SBA or other senior debt
- Working capital post-close: an ABL revolving line provides operating capital after the acquisition, funded by the business's own receivables — reducing the amount of cash the buyer needs to inject
- Leveraged buyout complement: in larger deals, ABL sits alongside senior term debt and seller financing in the deal stack
ABL vs. SBA Loans
SBA loans are cash-flow based: they underwrite primarily against earnings (DSCR) and have fixed payment schedules. ABL is asset-based: it underwrites against balance sheet assets and is revolving. Businesses with strong balance sheets but lumpy cash flow may qualify for ABL when they can't clear SBA DSCR minimums. The two can be used together — SBA term loan for acquisition, ABL revolving line for working capital.
Key ABL Considerations for Buyers
ABL facilities require ongoing borrowing base certificates — regular reporting to the lender showing the current value of pledged assets. This is more administrative overhead than a fixed-term SBA loan. ABL lenders also conduct periodic audits (field exams) to verify the assets. Buyers who use ABL should budget for this compliance work and ensure the business has systems to produce the required reports.
Related Terms
- UCC filing — how ABL lenders perfect security interests in receivables and inventory
- Working capital — the asset base that ABL revolving lines are drawn against
- Deal stack — how ABL fits alongside other acquisition financing layers
- SBA 7(a) loan — the cash-flow based alternative often used alongside ABL