
Equipment Valuations in ABL: A Guide for Referral Partners
May 10, 2026, 4 Minute(s) ReadWhen a client is facing a shift (tightening liquidity, a bank exit, restructuring, or even a planned transition) and needs asset-based (ABL) financing, understanding how equipment values can materially impact deal viability, structure, and speed of execution is crucial. Knowing how equipment is valued in an asset-based lending (ABL) scenario allows you to guide clients more effectively and position opportunities for more successful outcomes.
Why Equipment Valuations Matter to Referral Sources
Equipment is frequently a meaningful component of the collateral base in ABL transactions. How it’s valued directly influences:
- Borrowing base availability and advance rates.
- Deal structure and risk tolerance.
- Refinancing feasibility when banks step back.
- Recovery expectations in downside scenarios.
For referral partners, this isn’t just technical, it’s strategic. The right expectations around valuation can help you:
- Identify viable financing paths earlier.
- Avoid stalled deals.
- Maintain credibility with clients during transitions.
- Align opportunities with the right capital provider.
The Four Primary Equipment Valuation Approaches
Lenders rely on different valuation methodologies depending on the borrower’s financial profile and trajectory. Understanding these distinctions can help you better assess fit and timing.
1. Fair Market Value (FMV)
This reflects what equipment would sell for in a normal, competitive market between informed parties. FMV is typically relevant for stable, performing companies where financing is proactive rather than reactive.
2. Fair Market Value in Place (FMVIP)
This assumes the equipment remains installed and operational in a contained location. FMVIP is most applicable when the business is continuing as a going concern, particularly in manufacturing or specialized operations.
3. Orderly Liquidation Value (OLV)
This estimates recovery assuming a controlled, time-allowed sale process designed to maximize proceeds. OLV is often the bridge for transitional situations, when clients are under pressure but still operating with some runway.
4. Forced Liquidation Value (FLV)
This reflects the proceeds from a rapid sale, typically under distressed or time-constrained conditions. FLV becomes the key benchmark when a situation is time-sensitive, distressed, or credit-challenged. It is the most conservative approach and often the most relevant in ABL.
How Asset-Based Lenders Apply These Values
Lenders align valuation methodology with where the borrower sits on the credit spectrum:
- Performing, bankable credits: FMV / OLV
- Transitional or stressed credits: OLV trending toward FLV
- Distressed or urgent situations: FLV
For referral partners, this is where deals are often won or lost. Misalignment between client expectations and lender reality can slow execution or derail opportunities entirely.
A Practical Lens from the ABL Side
In many of the situations we see, clients are not approaching financing from a position of strength. Timing is compressed, and optionality is limited.
In these cases, equipment is typically underwritten closer to forced liquidation value, not as a pessimistic view, but as a practical one. It reflects:
- The speed at which assets may need to be monetized.
- The real-world depth of the buyer pool.
- The lender’s need for downside protection.
For referral sources, understanding this upfront allows for more accurate deal framing, better client conversations, and faster execution once a transaction is underway.
What This Means for Referral Partners
A working knowledge of equipment valuation helps you:
- Pre-qualify opportunities more effectively before introducing a lender.
- Set realistic expectations with clients on structure and proceeds.
- Position ABL as a proactive solution, not a last resort.
- Accelerate deal timelines by reducing valuation-related friction.
It also creates an opportunity to add value beyond the referral itself by helping clients understand how their asset base supports (or limits) their financing options.
Equipment valuation is more than a technical exercise; it’s a decision-making framework that shapes how asset-based lenders structure risk and deploy capital.
For referral sources, the advantage is clear: the better you understand how these values are applied, the more effectively you can identify the right opportunities, guide your clients, and drive successful outcomes.
About Celtic Capital
Companies looking for working capital to cover operating expenses, fund growth, increase buying power, and take advantage of vendor discounts and rebates turn to Celtic Capital. With an appetite for more complex transactions, Celtic Capital has a history of success in crafting creative, flexible asset-based financing solutions from $500,000 to $8 million with no financial covenants.
As an independent lender, working with companies nationwide, Celtic Capital is willing and able to alter price and deal structure and expand lines of credit to handle its clients’ increased revenues; and when cash flow is an issue, will look toward providing an inventory facility to help offset lost cash flow.

