Bridging Finance is a privately held Canadian company that provides middle-market Canadian companies with alternative financing options to those offered by traditional lenders.
Our funds are used to address short-term needs, including restructuring existing debt, providing working capital for growth, supporting inventory purchases and capital expenditures and acquisitions/buyouts.
We focus on companies who cannot access capital from traditional financing sources due to industry factors, complexity, size, or other unique challenges.
Bridging facilities are covenant-lite and quick, flexible and creative - and generally based on the value of the assets of the company and the borrowing needs.
A large investment pool is available for transactions from $1,000,000 to $15,000,000 with the potential for larger transactions.
BridgingFactor provides businesses with increased cash flow to support growth. Our product portfolio includes factoring/receivable finance, purchase or
Wellington Financial LP is a privately held specialty finance firm providing term and amortizing loans up to $30 million and venture debt loans up to $10 million. Wellington Financial LP is currently deploying a $600 million investment program via its fourth fund. The fund's clients vary in size and business model, but generally have current year revenue in excess of $5 million. Limited partners include several of Canada's largest institutional investors, crown corporations, financial institutions and pension funds
We have adopted this policy with recognition that protecting the privacy and security of the personal information we obtain about our customers is an important responsibility. We also know that you expect us to service you in an accurate and efficient manner. To do so, we must collect and maintain certain personal information about you. We want you to know what information we collect and how we use and safeguard that information.
The Toronto Centre understands that effective financial regulation and supervision are integral to a healthy, stable economy. Never has this been made more evident than during the 2008 Global Financial Crisis, when strong regulatory procedures and practices were found to be lacking in many jurisdictions. At the Toronto Centre, our objective is to promote financial stability and access globally by providing practical training to financial sector regulators and supervisors, particularly in emerging markets and low income countries. Stable economies create an environment for economic growth and job creation, while increased accessibility to financial services is an effective means to breaking the cycle of poverty.With these ends in mind, the Toronto Centre delivers capacity-building programs in the areas of banking, insurance, securities, pensions, microfinance, and microinsurance supervision. Programs can cover a variety of themes, such as leadership and change management, crisis-preparedness and management, macroprudential surveillance, risk-based supervision, consolidated supervision, FSAP preparation and follow-up, international core principles, anti-money laundering and combatting the financing of terrorism, and deposit insurance.The Toronto Centre's training programs are highly interactive and practical because we believe this is the best way for our participants to learn and develop the skills that allow them to make meaningful change in their home agencies