Structured Debt Finance
When the economic outlook turns for the worst, it's often the most ambitious projects that are shelved and plans frustrated. By using structured debt finance, OSL help keep your plans on track and ensure that a great opportunity becomes a successful project.
When the deals are big and the stakes are high there's safety in numbers and syndicated or structured debt finance may be the answer to your problems. OSL will place your borrowings between a group of lenders, including banks, building societies and private equity firms and together they will form a syndicate to share the risks and responsibilities alongside you on the project.
Corporate markets
Challenging corporate conditions call for intelligent and intuitive products. Ease your current business finances with corporate finance restructuring and structured debt finance arrangements...more
Corporate finance restructuring
If cashflow is becoming an increasing problem, then consider corporate finance restructuring before you 'throw in the business towel' and let OSL help relieve some of your stress...more
Structured debt finance
Frustrated by your bankers attitude to short term lending on overdraft and loan? Syndicate your debt to share the risks with structured debt finance. There's safety in numbers...more
Corporate broking
Need to refinance your successful business built on intellectual property? Our corporate broking facilities can allow you to raise much-needed finance by venture capital, private equity or IPO...more
Management buy out
OSL can arrange the most appropriate commercial finance vehicles for any management buy out arrangement including structured debt finance and corporate finance restructuring...more
Management buy in
Whether a straight-forward management buy in or more unusual buy-in management buy-out we can help raise finance through the banks, venture capital or private equity...more
Structured Debt Finance Case Study
Looking beyond debt
A long-standing client of OSL, a large manufacturing firm, came to us because they had reached a stalemate with their bank. The bank was becoming very cautious with the amount of debt the company had and was refusing to even consider extending their lending to fuel further growth, even though the business was sound and had a healthy order book.
The Directors felt that the bank was losing confidence in them and were frustrated that their expansion plans kept being pushed aside...more

