What Does ABL Stand For? | Asset Based Lending Explained

Learn what ABL means, how asset-based lending works in Canada, and when businesses should use it to manage cash flow and growth.
What Does ABL Stand For? | Asset Based Lending Explained
Written by
Alec Whitten
Published on
September 1, 2025

The Meaning of ABL

ABL stands for Asset-Based Lending. It’s a type of business financing where a company borrows money secured by its assets. Instead of relying solely on cash flow or credit score, lenders look at tangible business assets such as:

  • Accounts receivable (unpaid invoices)

  • Inventory

  • Equipment and machinery

  • Real estate

Because the loan is backed by collateral, lenders often feel more comfortable providing higher limits or extending credit to businesses that may not qualify for unsecured financing.

For Canadian companies, asset-based lending is a flexible way to unlock capital tied up in operations.

How Asset-Based Lending Works

The process typically looks like this:

  1. Business applies for financing and provides details of assets.

  2. Lender evaluates collateral (e.g., accounts receivable, trucks, equipment).

  3. Loan or line of credit is advanced based on a percentage of asset value (often 70–90% of receivables or 50–80% of equipment).

  4. Business uses the funds for payroll, supplier payments, growth, or refinancing.

  5. Repayments are made from cash flow, often linked to invoice collections.

Unlike traditional loans, the focus is less on profitability and more on the liquidation value of assets.

Why Businesses Use ABL

Canadian businesses use ABL when they:

  • Face cash flow gaps due to slow-paying customers.

  • Need working capital to fund growth.

  • Have valuable assets but weaker credit scores.

  • Want to unlock equity in equipment through refinancing & sale-leaseback.

  • Need quick, flexible financing outside strict bank criteria.

ABL is especially common in industries like:

Case Study: Using ABL to Grow

A mid-sized manufacturing company in Ontario had strong sales but cash flow issues due to 60–90 day customer payment cycles. Payroll and supplier costs created constant pressure.

They secured an asset-based lending facility tied to receivables and equipment. This gave them access to 80% of invoice values within 48 hours. The improved liquidity allowed them to expand operations and take on larger contracts.

Without ABL, the business would have stalled despite solid demand.

FAQ: Asset-Based Lending

1. What does ABL stand for in finance?
ABL stands for Asset-Based Lending, a financing option secured by business assets.

2. How is ABL different from factoring?
ABL provides a loan or line of credit secured by assets. Factoring involves selling invoices outright for cash. See invoice/freight factoring.

3. Can startups use ABL?
Startups with equipment or receivables may qualify, though traditional unsecured loans can be harder.

4. What assets qualify for ABL?
Receivables, equipment, inventory, and sometimes real estate. See our eligible equipment.

5. Is ABL more expensive than a bank loan?
Rates can be higher than traditional loans, but approvals are faster and more flexible.

6. When should a business consider ABL?
When cash flow is tight, credit is limited, or equity in assets needs to be unlocked.

Final Thoughts

ABL — Asset-Based Lending — is a practical financing tool for Canadian businesses looking to unlock capital from their own assets. Whether it’s receivables, inventory, or heavy equipment, ABL helps bridge cash flow gaps and fund growth when banks can’t.

Mehmi Financial Group specializes in flexible solutions, offering asset-based lending alongside equipment loans, leases, and lines of credit.

Ready to see if ABL fits your business? Contact our credit analysts today.

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