Blanket Lien
Definition
A security interest that gives a lender a claim against all of a borrower's assets, both current and future, rather than specific identified collateral. Blanket liens are commonly used in small business lending and working capital facilities where itemising individual assets would be impractical. While providing broad coverage, blanket liens rank according to the priority rules of the applicable jurisdiction (UCC in the US, PPSA in Canada, Companies Act in the UK).
Complementary Terms
Concepts that frequently appear alongside Blanket Lien in practice.
A security interest that becomes effective only upon the occurrence of a specified trigger event, such as a covenant breach, a decline in borrower creditworthiness, or the drawing down of a revolving credit facility beyond a certain threshold. Springing liens provide lenders with additional collateral protection when needed while allowing borrowers to operate without encumbered assets during normal business conditions.
The legal process by which a creditor's security interest in collateral becomes enforceable against third parties, typically through registration (UCC filing, PPSA registration, or Companies House filing), possession of the collateral, or control over financial assets. Perfection establishes the creditor's priority ranking relative to other secured parties.
The filing of a security interest under a Personal Property Securities Act, which is the legal framework governing secured transactions over personal property (including intangible assets) in jurisdictions such as Australia, New Zealand, and Canadian provinces. PPSA registration perfects the security interest, establishes priority against competing claims, and provides public notice of the encumbrance.
A security interest granted by a borrower over its intellectual property assets — including patents, trademarks, copyrights, and trade secrets — as collateral for a loan or other financial obligation. IP charges must typically be registered at both the relevant IP registry (such as the UK Intellectual Property Office or USPTO) and the general security interests registry (Companies House, UCC, or PPSA).
Debt that holds the highest priority claim on specified collateral in the event of default or liquidation, ranking ahead of unsecured and subordinated obligations. Senior secured lenders benefit from security interests over identified assets such as property, equipment, receivables, or intellectual property.
A form of security interest, primarily used in UK and Commonwealth jurisdictions, that attaches to a class of present and future assets of a company (such as stock, receivables, or general business assets) without preventing the company from dealing with those assets in the ordinary course of business. A floating charge 'crystallises' into a fixed charge upon the occurrence of a specified event such as default, appointment of a receiver, or commencement of winding up.
A short-term financing arrangement designed to fund a company's day-to-day operational needs, bridging the timing gap between paying suppliers and receiving payment from customers. Working capital facilities typically take the form of revolving credit facilities, overdrafts, or invoice finance arrangements, and are secured against current assets such as receivables and inventory.
A security interest over a specific, identified asset that prevents the borrower from dealing with or disposing of the charged asset without the lender's consent. Fixed charges attach to assets such as land, buildings, specific plant and equipment, or identified intellectual property rights.
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