Grid & Electrical Equipment
The order book funds the expansion.
Transformer, switchgear, and cable manufacturers are holding multi-year backlogs they cannot build fast enough. We finance the capacity against the contracts already signed and the plant already producing. The gear ships, and the debt is repaid by the revenue that justified it.
01 / The Sector
The long-lead gear that gates every build.
Transformers, switchgear, and cable are the equipment that connects a data center or a power project to the grid. Nothing energizes without it, and lead times now run years. The manufacturers hold multi-year order books but are capacity-constrained, and they need capital to expand the plant and to buy long-lead materials ahead of delivery. The demand is contracted. The constraint is production.
The constraint
The orders are already in hand. Capital is what turns backlog into shipped gear.
02 / How We Finance It
The instruments that fit the sector.
Each mandate takes the structure the situation calls for. Some carry across to a dedicated desk.
Equipment Finance
A new transformer or switchgear line financed against the equipment itself, so a manufacturer can add the capacity to fill an order book it cannot currently meet.
Working Capital
Confirmed multi-year orders and long-lead material purchases carried by a working-capital facility, so the manufacturer can buy copper, steel, and grain-oriented electrical steel ahead of delivery.
Trade Finance
Letters of credit and supply-chain finance for imported components, bushings, and cross-border sales, funding goods in transit and settling suppliers on their own terms.
Acquisition Finance
Debt to consolidate a fragmented supplier base of regional switchgear and cable shops into a single platform with the scale to bid utility-grade contracts.
View deskGrowth Capital
Expansion capital sized to the backlog, funding a second plant or a bottleneck removal without diluting the owners who built the order book.
View desk03 / What Secures The Debt
Real assets and contracted revenue.
The financing is secured on what the business already owns and is already owed. Lenders underwrite against tangible collateral and a visible backlog, not a forecast.
- 01 The plant and equipment
Presses, winding lines, tanks, and test bays, the physical capacity that produces the gear.
- 02 The confirmed order book
Signed multi-year contracts with utilities, hyperscalers, and EPCs, a visible stream of contracted revenue.
- 03 Inventory
Copper, electrical steel, and work in progress carried on the floor ahead of delivery.
- 04 Receivables
Amounts owed by creditworthy counterparties on gear already shipped and invoiced.
04 / Contact
Building capacity against a full order book?
Tell us the plant, the backlog, and what you are trying to build. We will tell you how we would structure the financing and which capital would fund it.