A syndicated loan is a big loan given to one borrower by a group of lenders, called a syndicate, who team up to share the funding and the risk.
It’s used when a single lender can’t or doesn’t want to cover the whole loan alone because it’s too large.
A syndicated loan is a big loan given to one borrower by a group of lenders, called a syndicate, who team up to share the funding and the risk. It’s used when a single lender can’t or doesn’t want to cover the whole loan alone because it’s too large.
Team of Lenders: Multiple banks or financial institutions chip in to provide the loan.
One Borrower: The borrower could be a company, government, or a big project.
Lead Bank: One bank takes charge, organizing the group, setting terms, and handling payments.
Shared Risk: Each lender only takes on the risk for their portion of the loan, so no one is on the hook for the whole amount.
One Contract: Everyone signs a single agreement that spells out the rules.
Big Money: These loans are usually for huge sums, often over $1 million, used for things like mergers, acquisitions, or major projects.
It lets borrowers access huge amounts of money that one lender couldn’t provide alone.
Spreads the risk across multiple lenders, making it safer for them.
Keeps things simple for the borrower with one set of terms instead of juggling multiple loans.