Borrowers often explore lending against investment portfolios for a simple reason: they want to access liquidity without selling assets. In principle, this makes sense. In practice, however, these facilities are more nuanced than they first appear.
Once investments are pledged as collateral, the relationship between lender, borrower, and portfolio becomes dynamic. Market movements, documentation terms, and lender policies can all influence how the facility behaves over time.
Our role is to help clients structure a Lombard loan facility so that it remains supportive as circumstances evolve. The goal is not simply to unlock capital, but to ensure the facility continues to work when markets move or funding priorities change.
Borrowers who approach these facilities strategically tend to retain far greater control over their balance sheet.
How Lombard Lending Works
At its core, lombard lending allows borrowers to raise capital while remaining invested. The portfolio acts as security for the loan, enabling access to liquidity without triggering asset sales.
What matters most, however, is not the initial drawdown. It is how the structure performs once the facility is live.
When advising clients, we focus on several factors that influence how the facility behaves over time:
portfolio composition, which affects advance rates and lender confidence
asset volatility, which can trigger reviews or margin adjustments
documentation terms, which often carry more practical impact than headline pricing
exit planning, which determines how the facility can be repaid or refinanced
Addressing these elements early helps ensure the facility remains stable even when markets become unsettled.
Risks Borrowers Often Underestimate
The risks associated with investment-backed lending rarely appear immediately. They tend to surface when timing becomes critical — during acquisitions, refinancing decisions, or periods of market volatility.
Borrowers frequently underestimate how quickly lender expectations can change once collateral values move.
Key areas of risk include:
- Market sensitivity
Even diversified portfolios can experience sudden valuation swings, potentially prompting lender reviews or margin adjustments. - Control limitations
Pledged securities may limit a borrower’s ability to rebalance their portfolio, dispose of assets, or adjust investment strategy. - Documentation triggers
Loan agreements sometimes contain provisions that allow lenders to request additional security or reduce borrowing capacity if certain thresholds are breached.
Identifying these risks early allows the facility to be structured with sensible buffers and realistic expectations.
When a Lombard Facility Can Support Wider Financing Plans
Many borrowers use investment-backed lending to support broader financial strategies rather than as a standalone product.
For example, these facilities are often used to:
fund property acquisitions without liquidating investments
bridge temporary liquidity gaps within a business
support time-sensitive investment opportunities
complement existing borrowing arrangements
Whether this approach works depends on how carefully the facility is integrated with the borrower’s wider financial position.
We examine how the loan interacts with mortgages, commercial facilities, and overall balance sheet exposure to ensure the structure strengthens the client’s position rather than creating hidden risks.
Structuring the Facility to Work Over Time
A Lombard facility should be designed to remain workable as markets move and financial priorities evolve.
Our approach focuses on building resilience into the structure from the outset.
- Careful structuring
Before approaching lenders, we test assumptions around volatility, collateral coverage, and exit strategy. Building conservative buffers into the facility helps reduce the likelihood of margin pressure later. - Ongoing involvement
Our involvement does not end once terms are agreed. We remain closely engaged during execution, coordinating lenders, legal teams, and advisers to ensure the final facility reflects the agreed strategy.
Staying close to the process helps prevent unnecessary changes and ensures the outcome remains aligned with the client’s objectives.
A Strategic Approach to Investment-Backed Lending
Accessing liquidity against investments can be highly effective when structured carefully. When approached casually, however, it can introduce constraints that only become visible later.
By focusing on structure, lender alignment, and long-term flexibility, we help clients implement a lombard loan facility that provides capital without sacrificing control of their portfolio.
The objective is not simply to unlock liquidity today, but to ensure the facility continues to support the client’s broader financial strategy as circumstances evolve.