In an 'income-into-capital' scheme the Borrower wants (in
substance) to borrow money. In broad terms, it does this by selling
an asset for a capital sum and buying it back at the end of the
'loan' period. The Borrower gets cash at the outset and repays it
when the option is exercised.
In the case of real property, to obtain the 'loan', the
Borrower can do one of three things:
In the case of other property (such as chattels machinery and
plant where the kit is not part of a real property interest) the
Borrower will sell its entire interest in the asset.
The amount Bank pays (as the option price) to Borrower for
the interest in the asset is the amount of money it 'loans' (this
is the substance, not the legal form, of the deal).
The Bank may be:
The normal case is that the lessor is generally an investment company which is a subsidiary of a major bank.