Unlock liquidity from equipment and machinery already on the balance sheet.
Strattington Capital evaluates sale-leaseback structures for owned operating assets, helping businesses convert equipment value into business-purpose capital while preserving day-to-day asset use.
Unlock liquidity from equipment you already own.
A sale-leaseback can help convert owned equipment or machinery into working capital while the business continues using the assets in daily operations.
01 Preserve operations
Continue using mission-critical assets while releasing capital tied up on the balance sheet.
02 Improve liquidity
Use proceeds for working capital, growth, refinancing, acquisitions, seasonal needs, or other business purposes.
03 Structure around the asset
Terms can be evaluated around asset value, useful life, collateral quality, cash flow, and business objectives.
When a sale-leaseback may be useful.
Sale-leasebacks are often considered when a business has meaningful owned equipment value and wants to convert that value into liquidity without disrupting operations.
Working capital
Release capital tied up in owned assets to support payroll, inventory, seasonal needs, or operating liquidity.
- Liquidity
- Seasonality
- Operations
Refinancing
Use asset value to refinance existing obligations, reduce pressure from near-term maturities, or reset the capital structure.
- Refinance
- Debt restructure
- Timing gaps
Growth and acquisitions
Convert owned equipment value into capital for expansion, additional equipment, facility growth, or acquisition support.
- Expansion
- Acquisitions
- Equipment needs
Important structure note
A sale-leaseback is not the same as selling an asset and walking away from it. The business sells the asset to a financing source and leases it back under agreed terms, allowing continued use while monetizing the value of the asset.
Have a financing need to review?
Share the business, collateral, requested facility size, and timing. Strattington Capital will provide a clear read on potential fit.