2 min read
Diagnose the stock need
Funding stock depends on the shape of the need. A one-off order you can size and repay from the resulting sale suits a short-term loan. Importing goods against a supplier suits trade finance. Holding inventory in anticipation of sales suits stock finance. Recurring, unpredictable stock needs suit a revolving line. Match the tool to whether the need is one-off, import-led, inventory-led or recurring.
The four routes
| Route | Best for | |
|---|---|---|
| Short-term loan | A defined stock order, repaid from the sale | |
| Trade finance | Importing / paying suppliers up front | |
| Stock finance | Holding inventory against expected sales | |
| Revolving line | Recurring, variable stock needs |
See PO vs stock finance and trade vs invoice finance for the specialist options. For a straightforward order, a short-term loan is often the simplest and cheapest.
Match repayment to the sale
Whatever you choose, repay it from the stock's sale, not from unrelated cash. A short-term loan sized to the order and timed to the selling period keeps the cost down and the borrowing self-liquidating. Model it with the loan repayment calculator and see the answer on borrowing for stock.
The Credicorp view
For a defined stock order, a short-term Credicorp business loan funds the purchase and is repaid from the sale — simple, off your suppliers, no personal guarantee. For recurring stock needs, a Credicorp Flex line fits. Register to apply. Educational content, not financial advice.
Frequently asked questions
What is the best finance to buy stock?
It depends on the need. A defined order repaid from the resulting sale suits a short-term loan. Importing suits trade finance, holding inventory suits stock finance, and recurring variable needs suit a revolving line. For a straightforward one-off order, a short-term loan is often simplest and cheapest.
Can I get a business loan to buy stock?
Yes. A short-term business loan sized to a stock order and timed to the selling period lets you buy the inventory and repay from the sale, keeping the borrowing self-liquidating. It avoids tying in suppliers the way trade finance does and is often the cheapest route for a defined order.
How should I repay stock finance?
From the sale of the stock it funded, not from unrelated cash. Sizing the borrowing to the order and timing repayment to the selling period keeps it self-liquidating and the cost down. Avoid funding perishable or slow-moving stock over a term longer than it takes to sell.
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