---
name: managing-credit-approval-packages
language: en
description: Creates credit approval memoranda with borrower analysis, deal structure, and risk mitigation documentation. Use when preparing credit packages, documenting loan recommendations, or presenting to credit committee.
tags:
  - management
  - commercial-banking
  - risk
  - credit
metadata:
  author: casemark
  practice_areas:
    - Commercial Banking
    - Trade Finance
    - Lending
  document_types:
    - Management Report
  skill_modes:
    - Management
    - Coordination
---
# Managing Credit Approval Packages

## When To Use

- Preparing a credit approval memorandum (CAM) for new loan originations, renewals, or modifications
- Documenting a lending recommendation for credit committee or senior credit officer review
- Packaging borrower financials, deal structure, and risk mitigants into a single approval submission
- Supporting trade finance facilities (letters of credit, supply chain finance, trade loans) that require formal credit approval
- Consolidating annual review packages for existing credit exposures

## Inputs To Gather

- **Borrower information**: Legal entity name, organizational structure, ownership/management bios, industry SIC/NAICS codes, years in business
- **Financial statements**: Minimum 3 years of audited or reviewed financials (balance sheet, income statement, cash flow); interim statements if available
- **Tax returns**: Business and personal guarantor returns for the corresponding periods
- **Loan request details**: Facility type (revolver, term loan, LOC, LC), requested amount, tenor, proposed pricing, fee structure, amortization schedule
- **Collateral data**: Appraisals, asset schedules, UCC search results, insurance certificates, environmental reports (Phase I/II if real estate secured)
- **Existing exposure**: Current outstanding balances, payment history, covenant compliance record, prior CAM decisions
- **Third-party reports**: Credit bureau reports (D&B, Experian business), industry benchmarks, credit rating agency data if rated
- **Guarantor financials**: Personal financial statements, liquidity verification for any individual guarantors

## Workflow

1. **Build the borrower profile**
   - Summarize entity history, ownership structure, and management experience
   - Identify the borrower's primary revenue drivers and customer/supplier concentration risks
   - Note any related-entity transactions or affiliate lending considerations

2. **Analyze financial performance**
   - Spread financial statements into a standardized template (common-size and trend analysis)
   - Calculate key credit metrics: debt service coverage ratio (DSCR), leverage ratio (Debt/EBITDA), current ratio, fixed charge coverage, tangible net worth
   - Compare metrics against the institution's internal risk rating thresholds and industry medians
   - Identify trends — improving, stable, or deteriorating — and flag anomalies (one-time gains, unusual adjustments)

3. **Structure the deal**
   - State the requested facility type, amount, rate, tenor, and repayment terms
   - Define proposed covenants: financial (minimum DSCR, maximum leverage), reporting (frequency and type of financial deliverables), and negative covenants (restrictions on additional debt, dividends, asset sales)
   - Specify collateral package with advance rates and margining methodology (e.g., 80% on eligible A/R < 90 days, 50% on inventory at NLV)
   - Address guaranty structure — limited vs. unlimited, joint and several, guarantor net worth thresholds

4. **Assess and mitigate risk**
   - Assign a proposed internal risk rating with supporting rationale
   - Identify primary risks: credit/default risk, collateral risk, industry/market risk, concentration risk, regulatory risk
   - For each risk, document the specific mitigant (e.g., "Customer concentration mitigated by credit insurance on top-3 accounts and diversified backlog")
   - For trade finance facilities, address country risk, documentary compliance risk, and counterparty bank risk [VERIFY against institution's country risk matrix]
   - Note any policy exceptions required and the justification for each

5. **Compile the approval package**
   - Assemble the CAM with standard sections: Executive Summary, Borrower Overview, Financial Analysis, Deal Structure, Risk Assessment, Recommendation
   - Attach supporting exhibits: financial spreads, collateral schedules, organizational charts, covenant compliance calculations, third-party reports
   - Include a clear recommendation (Approve / Approve with Conditions / Decline) with the specific approval authority level required [VERIFY delegated lending authority limits]
   - Route to appropriate approvers based on aggregate exposure and risk rating per the institution's credit authority matrix

6. **Track and follow through**
   - Log committee questions and any conditions of approval (e.g., "Approval subject to receipt of updated appraisal within 60 days")
   - Ensure all conditions precedent are satisfied before funding
   - File the executed package in the credit file with an index for regulatory examination readiness

## Output

The completed credit approval package should contain:

- **Executive Summary** (1 page): Borrower name, facility summary, recommendation, key risks, and mitigants
- **Borrower Overview** (1–2 pages): Entity background, management, industry positioning
- **Financial Analysis** (2–4 pages): Spread summaries, ratio analysis, trend commentary, projections if applicable
- **Deal Structure** (1–2 pages): Terms, covenants, collateral, guaranty details
- **Risk Assessment** (1–2 pages): Risk rating rationale, identified risks with mitigants, policy exceptions
- **Recommendation**: Clear approve/decline with conditions and authority level
- **Exhibits**: Financial spreads, collateral schedules, org charts, third-party reports, covenant compliance worksheets

## Quality Checks

- All financial ratios tie back to the spread and source financial statements — no orphaned calculations
- Proposed risk rating is consistent with the ratio analysis and qualitative factors presented
- Covenant levels are calibrated to actual borrower performance (not so tight they trigger immediately, not so loose they provide no protection)
- Collateral advance rates conform to institutional policy [VERIFY policy manual for current advance rate limits]
- Aggregate exposure (including contingent facilities like LCs) is calculated correctly for determining approval authority
- Any policy exceptions are explicitly identified with compensating factors — never buried in narrative
- Trade finance-specific packages include confirmation of approved bank/country lines [VERIFY country and bank line availability]
- The recommendation section contains no ambiguity — the ask and the answer must be unmistakable
