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Swingline facilities meaning

What does Swingline facilities mean?
In banking and finance practice, a swingline facility is a short-term, rapid-draw sub-limit within a syndicated revolving credit facility, used to provide same-day liquidity. A swingline loan is typically made by the agent or another designated swingline lender, for very brief maturities (commonly overnight and usually no longer than five business days), in smaller minimum amounts and on shorter notice than standard RCF drawings, and it bears a higher interest rate or margin. This is a market term, not defined by legislation or case law, and is used in LMA-based loan documentation across England & Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland and Ireland with a broadly consistent meaning. It is principally a working capital and cashflow-bridging tool: the swingline lender fronts funds quickly and is repaid on the short maturity date, or refinanced by the next revolving credit utilisation. Documentation typically sets a swingline sub-limit, specific availability periods and currencies, and may provide for automatic or optional participations by other lenders on conversion to a standard RCF loan. Pricing is usually a margin over a short-term base or benchmark rate, reflecting accelerated funding and higher administrative costs.
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View the related Practice Notes about Swingline facilities

PRACTICE NOTES
Acquisition and Leveraged Finance: Practitioner’s A–Z of Terms, Covenants, Structures and Jargon

This glossary sets out many of the expressions commonly used in the leveraged finance market. Words appearing in the definitions in bold are defined elsewhere in this glossary. For further banking terminology, please refer to the main Banking & Finance Glossary... Acquisition finance glossary—A Acceleration Acceleration is the formal action taken by the agent, on the instructions of the majority lenders, following an event of default, such as making a demand for early repayment of the loan. See Practice Note: Accelerating a loan for more information... Accordion feature/accordion facility An accordion, also called an incremental debt feature, is a mechanism in the facilities agreement that, provided specified conditions are satisfied (for example, pro forma compliance with a leverage test), permits those lenders under the facilities agreement who wish to do so to advance additional debt. The terms for that extra debt are typically captured in an increase notice. This accordion or incremental debt flexibility is different from structural adjustment, which usually requires the majority consent...

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PRACTICE NOTES
UK Banking, Finance, Capital Markets, Derivatives and Insolvency Law Glossary including Islamic finance

Banking & Finance glossary A Auditing and Accounting Organisation for Islamic Financial Institutions (AAOIFI) The foremost Islamic, international, autonomous, independent, not-for-profit corporate body that develops and issues accounting, auditing, governance, ethics and Shari’ah benchmarks and standards for Islamic Financial Institutions (IFIs) and the wider Islamic finance sector. Founded in Bahrain in 1991, it is backed by a number of institutional members across more than 45 countries, including central banks and regulatory authorities, financial institutions, accounting and auditing practices, and legal firms. Its pronouncements are currently applied by leading Islamic financial institutions across the world and have advanced a progressive and gradual harmonisation of global Islamic finance practice. It also delivers professional qualification programmes—notably Certified Islamic Professional Accountant (CIPA), Certified Shari’ah Adviser and Auditor (CSAA), and the corporate compliance programme—in efforts to strengthen the industry’s human capital and governance frameworks. For further details, see Practice Note: Key participants in the Islamic finance industry—Accounting and Auditing Organisation for Islamic Financial Institutions (AAOIFI). Acceleration Acceleration is the formal action...

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