Sale & Leaseback for Manufacturers (2026): Plant to Cash
Most manufacturers think their owned CNC is locked equity — quietly sitting on the factory floor while working capital gets squeezed by 60-day raw material terms. Sale and leaseback reads the asset differently. The machine stays on the hardstand, the title moves to a funder, cash hits the trading account, and a deductible rental replaces a depreciating lump. Here's the before/after and the lender view.
Manufacturing Equipment: Lease vs Rental vs Chattel vs CHP
Chattel mortgage is the default for most Australian manufacturers buying plant in 2026 — ownership from day one, full GST credit in the next BAS, and a clean depreciation schedule. Finance Lease, Commercial Hire Purchase and Operating Rental each have a narrow window where they beat chattel on structure, cashflow or off-balance-sheet treatment
Dandenong & South-East Manufacturer Equipment Finance (2026)
Dandenong, Hallam, Keysborough and Cranbourne read as one precinct on a credit file, not four suburbs. Here's how South-East Melbourne manufacturer equipment finance actually gets approved in 2026 — what each suburb signals to a lender, and why the March PMI softness sharpens the suburb-cluster proof pack rather than weakening it.
2026 Construction Loan Pack: Plant, Pre-Start & Dev Sequencing
The RBA cash rate sits at 4.10% after the March decision, Victoria adopts NCC 2025 from 1 May, and most builders are still stacking facilities in the wrong order. The right sequence — plant, pre-start gap, development — decides which application gets approved and which one blocks the next. Here's the 2026 construction loan pack playbook.
One Doc Home Loan for Civil Contractors: Retention Income
Civil contractors get told their retention-heavy income kills a residential application. On a One Doc home loan it doesn't — the document teardown reads BAS turnover and self-declaration, not full PAYG payslips. Here's what's actually inside the file and where the deal lives or dies.
Commercial Property Loans for Builder Owner-Occupiers (2026)
A builder buying their own yard-and-office combo isn't a residential loan, isn't a development loan, and isn't quite a standard commercial property loan either. The owner-occupier file sits in its own lane — different LVR, different servicing read, different entity structure. Here's how the file actually runs.
What Lenders See in a Low Doc Civil Plant File (2026)
A low-doc civil plant file isn't read like a vanilla asset deal. The credit team is hunting for cashflow consistency on BAS, a clean PPSR picture, supplier-invoice integrity and resale strength on the asset. Here's what's actually on the assessor's screen — and what makes the file pass on the first pass.
No Presales Development Finance: When Private Funders Say Yes
Bank development finance asks for pre-sold stock before settlement. Private and non-bank funders don't. Here's the approval anatomy of a no-presales development deal — what gets weighed, where the deal lives or dies, and why exit strategy carries the file when contracts can't.
2026 Café Loan Pack: Sequencing Fitout, Kit, LOC & WC
The RBA cash rate sits at 4.10% after the March lift, Payday Super kicks in 1 July, and most café owners are still stacking facilities in the wrong order. The right sequence — fitout, equipment, line of credit, working capital — decides which application gets approved and which one blocks the next. Here's the 2026 loan pack playbook.
One Doc Home Loan for Multi-Venue Café Owners (2026)
What happens when you own two cafés under two entities and one trust in the middle? The tax return picture is three files deep, and by the time the accountant finalises the group, the property you wanted is gone. A One Doc Home Loan lets a multi-venue café owner consolidate income onto a single accountant letter. Here's the proof pack it sits on.