Intellectual Property Financing
Notice. This page is informational. Financing transactions remain subject to intellectual property valuation, legal review, underwriting analysis, and lender approval.

Intellectual Property Financing

Intellectual property assets can represent significant economic value. Patents, trademarks, software platforms, licensing rights, and digital assets may generate revenue streams or support strategic market positioning for companies operating in technology, media, and consumer markets.

Companies and investors sometimes structure financing secured by intellectual property to unlock liquidity, finance acquisitions, or support growth initiatives without disposing of core assets.

FG Capital Advisors works on financing structures secured by intellectual property portfolios including acquisition financing, refinancing of IP-backed facilities, and structured credit solutions based on licensing or royalty income. In certain transactions additional capital may also be structured through gap financing where the primary lender funds only part of the capital requirement.

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Typical Intellectual Property Financing Scenarios

  • Loans secured by patent portfolios
  • Financing against trademarks or brand assets
  • Credit facilities secured by software platforms or digital assets
  • Acquisition financing for intellectual property portfolios
  • Refinancing of existing IP-backed loans
  • Liquidity facilities secured by licensing revenue streams
  • Supplemental gap financing for intellectual property acquisitions

How Intellectual Property Financing Works

Financing secured by intellectual property typically relies on the economic value of the asset and its potential to generate licensing or commercial revenue. Lenders review legal ownership, enforceability of rights, revenue history where available, market comparables, and the strategic importance of the asset.

Intellectual property with established licensing income or strong commercial relevance is more likely to support structured lending. Financing terms ultimately depend on asset valuation, borrower profile, and the broader transaction structure.

Gap Financing In Intellectual Property Transactions

In some acquisitions or financing structures the primary lender may fund only part of the required capital. Additional capital may sometimes be arranged through structured gap financing or junior facilities depending on asset value and transaction economics.

These structures can allow companies to acquire or retain valuable intellectual property while preserving equity capital.

What We Help With

  • Evaluation of intellectual property assets for financing suitability
  • Structuring of IP-backed credit facilities
  • Preparation of lender-facing financing materials
  • Coordination with specialty lenders and credit funds
  • Refinancing of existing intellectual property loans
  • Capital structure design including potential gap financing

Important Considerations

Not all intellectual property assets support financing. Lenders evaluate enforceability of rights, revenue potential, valuation credibility, and market demand before extending credit.

Financing remains subject to lender underwriting, legal review, and final credit approval.

If you are acquiring intellectual property, refinancing IP-backed debt, or structuring financing secured by patents, trademarks, software platforms, or licensing revenue, submit the transaction details for review.

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