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    Corporate Financing ABC – All Financing Types Explained

    Aaron VihersolaAaron VihersolaFounder & Finance Expert at Suomen Rahoitus
    18 min read
    Finnish lake landscape – the corporate financing landscape is vast
    Corporate financing options are broader than ever

    The world of corporate financing is broader than ever before. Alongside the traditional bank loan, dozens of alternative financing types have emerged – from invoice financing to crowdfunding and from mezzanine financing to revenue-based financing. According to the Bank of Finland, Finnish SMEs' loan portfolio was EUR 52 billion in 2025. As an entrepreneur, I have found that choosing the right financing type is one of the most important strategic decisions.

    The Big Picture of Corporate Financing

    Corporate financing broadly divides into four main categories: debt capital (loans and credits), receivables financing (invoice financing and factoring), asset-based financing (leasing and hire purchase) and equity (investments and crowdfunding). Additionally, public grants form their own important category.

    Debt Capital – Loans and Credits

    Bank Loan

    A bank loan is still the most common form of corporate financing in Finland. The interest rate is typically 3–7% p.a. and the loan term 1–15 years. A bank loan is best suited for investments, business acquisitions and other larger financing needs. The challenge is the collateral requirement and lengthy application process.

    Credit Line

    A credit line is flexible working capital financing where interest is paid only on the used portion. It suits seasonal fluctuations and unexpected expenses. The limit size is typically EUR 10,000–500,000 for SMEs.

    Bond

    A bond is suitable for larger companies (revenue over EUR 5M). The company issues bonds to investors. The interest rate is usually 5–10% p.a. and maturity 2–5 years. The benefit is that the bank does not act as a gatekeeper.

    Receivables Financing

    Invoice Financing

    Invoice financing converts receivables into cash within 24 hours. The company chooses which invoices to finance. The cost is 1–3% of the invoice value. No collateral required – the invoice itself is the security. Especially suitable for B2B companies with long payment terms.

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    Factoring

    Factoring is more comprehensive receivables financing where the finance company finances the entire invoice portfolio and often handles collections as well. Factoring suits companies that want to outsource receivables management entirely.

    Asset-Based Financing

    Leasing

    In leasing, the finance company owns the asset and leases it to the company. Payments are fully tax-deductible. Especially suitable for rapidly depreciating technology and vehicles.

    Hire Purchase

    In hire purchase financing, ownership transfers to the buyer. Suitable for investments where ownership is important. The interest rate is typically 4–8% p.a.

    Equity

    Venture Capital

    A venture capital investor invests money in the company in exchange for ownership. Suitable for scalable business models targeting rapid growth. The investor brings money, expertise and networks, but the entrepreneur gives up part of ownership.

    Crowdfunding

    In crowdfunding, a large group of investors finances the company with small amounts. Equity crowdfunding suits EUR 50,000–2,000,000 financing rounds. Platforms in Finland include Invesdor and Springvest.

    Public Financing Sources

    Key public financiers:

    • Finnvera: Loans, guarantees, export guarantees – financed 3,200 SMEs in 2025
    • Business Finland: R&D financing, Tempo, NIY – grants and loans
    • ELY Centre: Development grants, wage subsidies, startup grants
    • EU programs: Horizon Europe, COSME, structural funds

    According to Statistics Finland, the average equity ratio of SMEs is 38%. This means 62% of financing is debt capital. Diversification of financing sources is important – do not depend on a single financier.

    Comparison of Financing Types

    How to Choose the Right Financing Type?

    In my own company, I have learned that the choice of financing type depends above all on the intended use. I have compiled a simple decision tree to help with the choice.

    Decision tree for choosing financing type:

    • I need money for salaries and running costs → Credit line or invoice financing
    • A lot of capital is tied up in receivables → Invoice financing
    • I want to buy a machine or equipment → Leasing or bank loan
    • I am planning a business acquisition → Bank loan + Finnvera + seller financing
    • I want to scale internationally fast → Venture capital
    • I need money for an R&D project → Business Finland
    • I am a startup entrepreneur → Finnvera startup guarantee + ELY startup grant

    Fundamentals of Applying for Financing

    Regardless of the financing type, financiers always evaluate the same fundamentals: the company's ability to pay, collateral, business plan and management expertise. A well-prepared application significantly speeds up the process.

    Financier's evaluation criteria:

    • Revenue and profitability – is cash flow sufficient for repayments?
    • Equity ratio – is there a buffer on the balance sheet?
    • Collateral – what can you offer as loan security?
    • Industry and market outlook – is the business on a solid foundation?
    • Management experience and expertise – does the financier trust the team?

    "The ABC of corporate financing is simple: know the options, compare the costs and choose the right one for the purpose. Do not settle for the first offer – there is more choice on the market than ever."

    Aaron Vihersola, Suomen Rahoitus

    Summary

    The corporate financing landscape is broad and constantly evolving. Alongside the traditional bank loan, invoice financing, leasing, venture capital and public grants offer diverse alternatives. The right financing type depends on the purpose, speed requirement, cost and collateral situation. Diversify your financing sources and apply for financing in time.

    📌 Summary

    Corporate financing types include debt capital (bank loan 3–7%, credit line 4–8%), receivables financing (invoice financing 1–3%, factoring), asset-based financing (leasing, hire purchase), equity (venture capital, crowdfunding) and public grants (Finnvera, Business Finland, ELY). Choose the financing type based on purpose.

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    Aaron Vihersola

    Aaron Vihersola

    Founder & Finance Expert at Suomen Rahoitus

    Founder of Suomen Rahoitus, over 5 years of experience in SME financing solutions
    Finance Expert
    Entrepreneur
    Invoice Financing Specialist

    Founder and CEO of Suomen Rahoitus, who has helped hundreds of Finnish SMEs solve cash flow challenges through invoice financing. Aaron has years of practical experience in financing solutions across various industries as an entrepreneur and financial consultant.

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