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6.5.4 Sale and Leaseback

A company that is short of cash or that needs cash to finance a new investment can sell its freehold property to a finance company at its current market value, with an agreement that it leases the property back and continues operating from it for the period of the lease. From a cash flow viewpoint the company gets a large one-off amount of cash from the sale and has to pay regular repayments of the lease liability. Effectively an existing asset is sold and then leased back by the vendor (the seller). Most lease arrangements of this type are financial leases.

In the long-term the company risks having to buy or lease another property when the lease expires.

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