This course provides a comprehensive understanding of Facility Structuring Logic within the framework of Corporate & Wholesale Credit Support. Learners will explore how credit facilities are structured using appropriate limits, covenants, tenors, repayment schedules, and risk-mitigation mechanisms to support disciplined, sustainable, and governance-aligned corporate lending decisions.
The course explains the scope, intent, and governance significance of Facility Structuring Logic in credit workflows that require structured assessment, boundary definition, independent review, and documented decision-making. Participants will learn how facility structuring practices support proactive risk mitigation, strengthen exposure governance, and improve the reliability and effectiveness of corporate and wholesale credit arrangements.
Key concepts covered include designing credit facilities with appropriate limits, covenant frameworks, tenor structures, repayment terms, and exposure alignment methodologies. Each component is examined as a distinct assessment dimension requiring evidence-based validation, independent analytical review, and documented rationale before any escalation recommendation, structuring response, or credit action is finalized.
The module also clarifies the distinction between Facility Structuring Logic and broader portfolio diversification strategy frameworks. While portfolio diversification strategy focuses on enterprise-level allocation balance, sector distribution, and concentration management objectives, Facility Structuring Logic specifically addresses the structured design of borrower-level credit arrangements, repayment structures, covenant protections, exposure boundaries, and escalation-response procedures related to facility configuration and risk containment. Learners will understand how these functions operate under separate governance structures, ownership responsibilities, evidence standards, and approval authorities.
Special emphasis is placed on Exposure Structuring & Limits Management activities, where credit analysts execute assessments, complete supporting documentation, and flag material exceptions for managerial review within Corporate & Wholesale Credit Support functions. The course demonstrates how facility structuring findings influence escalation scope, governance prioritization, exposure monitoring intensity, and credit committee focus.
By the end of this course, learners will be able to structure corporate credit facilities effectively, evaluate exposure and covenant design considerations, assess repayment and tenor suitability, and contribute effectively to governance oversight and risk mitigation within modern corporate and wholesale credit environments.