fundamentals of credit

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layout: elements in a slide fundamentals of credit corporate finance institute® kyle peterdy vp, commercial banking & credit about kyle... course instructor kyle’s background is in commercial lending, where he was responsible for originating and underwriting middle market credit transactions. he has extensive experience conducting financial analysis and assessing business and industry risks. kyle has a bed from mcgill university (montreal, qc) and an mba from the sauder school of business at the university of british columbia (vancouver, bc). kyle is passionate about teaching and corporate training. corporate finance institute® learning objectives define what credit is and how it’s created. identify some of the different career opportunities available to credit professionals. compare different types of interest payments and loan characteristics to help inform an appropriate credit structure. explain what capital expenditure (or capex) is and how debt financing can support it. explain the 5 cs of credit framework and how …
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dit is created when one party receives resources from another party without immediate payment. lender facilitates the transaction lender (credit provider/creditor) credit corporate finance institute® what is credit credit receiver (borrower/debtor) lender (credit provider/creditor) vendor of product, services, etc. (credit provider/creditor) credit is created when one party receives resources from another party without immediate payment. trade credit corporate finance institute® what is credit account payable (amount owing) account receivable (amount owed) credit is created when one party receives resources from another party without immediate payment. trade credit corporate finance institute® what is credit credit receiver (borrower/debtor) lender (credit provider/creditor) vendor of product, services, etc. (credit provider/creditor) credit is created when one party receives resources from another party without immediate payment. corporate finance institute® companies vs. individuals credit is a promise to pay for something of value later, typically with interest charged by the lender. companies may use credit to help …
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d? when it comes to commercial credit, however, there is a little more nuance. a commercial borrower has both strategic reasons to use debt in its capital structure and some practical reasons. practically speaking, companies borrow money to make investments that will generate future revenue and, presumably, future cash flow. investments in the business are assets. corporate finance institute® how & why is credit used? corporate finance institute® how & why is credit used? capex corporate finance institute® how & why is credit used? corporate finance institute® how & why is credit used? corporate finance institute® how & why is credit used? corporate finance institute® how & why is credit used? corporate finance institute® how & why is credit used? corporate finance institute® sources of funding corporate finance institute® sources of funding corporate finance institute® sources of funding corporate finance institute® sources of funding equitycash credit/debt corporate finance institute® sources …
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tax- deductible • will not dilute existing shareholders or change ownership percentage • cheaper than equity; lower risk source of funding cons • requires greater attention around liquidity • higher risk may mean higher interest rates • excessive debt and/or insufficient liquidity can cause insolvency • may have covenants which are “rules” – things that a borrower cannot do (or must do) corporate finance institute® why is debt a lower risk source of funding than equity? debt equity the capital stack corporate finance institute® why is debt a lower risk source of funding than equity? debt equity lowest risk lowest expected return highest risk highest expected return corporate finance institute® why is debt a lower risk source of funding than equity? debt equity subordinated debt mezzanine financing preferred shares corporate finance institute® why is debt a lower risk source of funding than equity? debt equity common shares senior debt corporate …
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quidation, claims against company assets would be made from top to bottom of the capital stack. corporate finance institute® why is debt a lower risk source of funding than equity? debt equity 1 corporate finance institute® why is debt a lower risk source of funding than equity? debt equity 1 2 corporate finance institute® why is debt a lower risk source of funding than equity? debt equity corporate finance institute® why is debt a lower risk source of funding than equity? this is why debt is considered a lower risk source of funding than equity! types & features of credit corporate finance institute® types of credit often a line of credit or a credit card that has a capped credit limit. may be drawn, paid back, and re-drawn (up to its limit). 1 revolving a type of loan with pre- determined payments. often called “reducing” (or amortizing) as the principal …

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layout: elements in a slide fundamentals of credit corporate finance institute® kyle peterdy vp, commercial banking & credit about kyle... course instructor kyle’s background is in commercial lending, where he was responsible for originating and underwriting middle market credit transactions. he has extensive experience conducting financial analysis and assessing business and industry risks. kyle has a bed from mcgill university (montreal, qc) and an mba from the sauder school of business at the university of british columbia (vancouver, bc). kyle is passionate about teaching and corporate training. corporate finance institute® learning objectives define what credit is and how it’s created. identify some of the different career opportunities available to credit professionals. compare diffe...

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