Article Directory : ArticleDirectory.com
Translate Page To German Tranlate Page To Spanish Translate Page To French Translate Page To Italian Translate Page To Japanese Translate Page To Korean Translate Page To Portuguese Translate Page To Chinese
  Number Times Read : 18      
Categories

Free Newsletter
First Name:

E-mail:


Accounting
Beauty
Business
Career
Cars and Trucks
Computers
Culture and Society
Environment
Family
Finance
Fitness
Food and Drink
Free Tools and Resources
Health
Hobbies
Home
Humor
Inspirational/Motivation
Internet
Internet Marketing
Legal
Marketing
Men Issues
Music
Personal Development
Pets and Animals
Politics
Psychology
Publishing
Recreation and Leisure
Relationships
Religion and Spiritualit
Science
Speaking
Technology
Women Issues
Writing
 
Stats
Total Articles: 167855
Total Authors: 10059
Total Downloads: 1722017


Newest Member
gurpreetsingh chandi
 


   

An Introduction to Leasing and Asset Finance



[Valid RSS feed]  Category Rss Feed - http://www.articledirectory.com/rss.php?rss=46
By : john mce    14 or more times read
Submitted 2007-11-18 10:39:50

Confused by the types of finance available to your business? Want to expand your operations but don't have the liquid capital available to invest in things like equipment? If so a leasing agreement could be right for your business.

How does it work?

Essentially all leasing agreements work on the principle of renting an asset from a third party, usually a financial institution, for a fixed period. This type of contract is typically referred to as a lease.

Leasing plays a big part in the property market where properties are leased out to tenants. However leasing is also a popular way to finance business growth or deal with financial difficulties.

Typically the lease agreement will work as follows;

- A business requires a new asset (for example a factory needs an expensive new machine)
- The factory reaches an agreement with a lessor
- The lessor buys the new machine from its seller
- The lessor rents the machine out to the factory for a fixed term as defined in the lease agreement i.e. 2 years.
- At the end of the lease term the factory either returns the machine or renews the contract with the lessor.

Why use leasing as a form of finance?

Leasing improves cash flow for companies as expensive outgoings like purchasing equipment are offset by the lessor and the company only pays a rental fee. Although this fee will typically be more than the relative cost of purchasing the asset outright, the cost is spread over manageable rental instalments.

Unlike a loan many lease agreements are not regarded as a debt but as an expense. This is more favourable to a business entering other credit agreements where the stronger a credit position the business is in the more eligible they will be for preferential rates and higher lending.

As an asset is not owned by the business but by the lessor the residual cost of owning aging assets such as machinery are offset. This means a business can upgrade once an asset reaches obsolescence without the cost involved with selling or disposing of the aging asset. This is most effective in cases such as IT equipment leasing where technology companies want to stay up to date with their IT infrastructure without the continual cost of degrading IT kit.

Problems with leasing

As mentioned, leasing can be an expensive way to raise finance, often more than other routes including loans and always more expensive than buying an asset for cash as the lessor themselves need to make their own profit.
Lease contracts will often tie businesses into a fixed term meaning if circumstances change the business will still need to keep up lease payments.

As when leasing the business does not own the asset, when valuing a company, for example during a buy-out or merger their will be less material assets to base a valuation on.

Is leasing the right finance option for my business?

Our best advice is to consult financial specialists prior to entering any lease transactions.
Author Resource:- John Mce writes for the Commercial Finance People, who specialise in the placement of candidates in executive and management level positions within Invoice Finance, Asset Based Lending, Asset Finance / Leasing , Commercial banking, Corporate banking and Business banking, working with a wide variety of organisations based throughout the UK.
Article From Article Directory

HTML Ready Article. Click on the "Copy" button to copy into your clipboard.




Firefox users please select/copy/paste as usual
New Members
select
Sign up
select
learn more
 
Nav Menu
Home
Login
Submit Articles
Submission Guidelines
Top Articles
Link Directory
About Us
Contact Us
Privacy Policy
RSS Feeds

Actions
Print This Article
Add To Favorites

 
Sponsors