capital-formation
How should seller financing be shown in the capital stack?
It should be shown with principal amount, interest, maturity, amortization, subordination, security, payment restrictions, and default rights.
Seller financing can close a valuation gap but also affects cash flow, lender rights, and seller alignment after close. For sponsors assembling closeable financing for acquisitions and single-deal vehicles, the practical answer is to treat the question as part of equity commitments, debt financing, rollover capital, seller financing, reserves, closing funds flow, and investor allocation, not as a one-off definition. The record should show sources and uses, investor commitments, lender term sheets, rollover agreements, seller notes, reserve assumptions, funds flow, and closing checklist so an investor, lender, counsel, administrator, or operating lead can reconstruct the decision later. Model the seller note alongside debt service, working capital, distributions, covenant headroom, and transition obligations. The common failure mode is treating seller financing as friendly capital while missing repayment pressure, consent rights, or conflict with senior debt documents.
Related glossary terms
Related questions
What should a sponsor include in a sources and uses schedule?
It should show purchase price, fees, expenses, debt, equity, rollover, seller financing, reserves, working capital, and any closing adjustments.
How should sponsors decide how much equity to raise for a deal?
They should size equity against purchase price, debt capacity, required reserves, working capital needs, fees, downside scenarios, and investor return targets.
What should sponsors compare across acquisition debt term sheets?
They should compare leverage, pricing, amortization, covenants, collateral, fees, prepayment terms, reporting, certainty, and lender behavior.