2 min read
The funding challenge for steel fabrication firms
Steel fabricators buy steel at prices that swing with the market and run costly machinery, committing materials to contracts long before payment. The money goes out well before it comes back in, and for steel fabrication firms that timing mismatch — around steel stock, fabrication machinery and per-contract materials — is the recurring pressure point. Understanding the shape of it is the first step to funding it without overpaying.
The facility that tends to fit
For this trade the natural route is asset finance for machinery, plus stock finance for steel, because it matches the need rather than forcing a general-purpose loan onto a specific problem. Where a firm needs both an asset funded and a cash gap bridged, running two matched facilities is usually cheaper than stretching one to do both jobs. Read the underlying guide before committing.
Put real numbers behind it
Size the facility against your own figures with our cash conversion cycle calculator and the stock finance guide on Learn. Borrowing a figure pulled from a forecast beats borrowing a round number, and it keeps the repayments matched to when cash actually arrives.
How lenders view the trade
Our sector page for steel fabrication firms sets out what a lender looks at, and the general answers on whether your sector affects getting a loan and how affordability is assessed give the wider picture. Credicorp lends to limited companies and LLPs, not individuals, with no personal guarantee. When ready, you can apply. General information, not an offer of finance.
Frequently asked questions
Does being in this sector affect whether steel fabrication firms can borrow?
The sector shapes what a lender looks at — the assets, the cash cycle, the typical payment terms — but it does not decide the outcome. Affordability, trading history and how the borrowing is structured matter more. A well-run business in this trade is judged on its own figures.
Should I use asset finance or a working-capital facility?
Fund an asset with asset finance, spreading it over the asset's life; bridge a recurring cash gap with a revolving facility or invoice finance. Using the wrong tool — a long loan for a short gap, or working capital for a permanent asset — is how firms end up overpaying. Match the facility to the need.
How much can steel fabrication firms borrow?
It depends on turnover, profitability and how comfortably repayments fit your cash flow, not the sector alone. Run your figures through the affordability calculator for a realistic range before you apply.
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Read →Funding for UK limited companies
Credicorp lends to your company, not to you personally — short-term working capital with no personal guarantee. See what your business could access.