In simple terms
A friendly intro before the formal notes — no formulas yet.
Where the money comes from
Finance is fuel. A business needs it to start, to run day to day, and to grow — but the money can come from very different places, and each place has its own price tag. Some finance comes from inside the business, some from outside. Some has to be repaid with interest, some never has to be repaid but costs you a slice of ownership. Choosing the wrong source is like filling a diesel engine with petrol: even the right amount of money in the wrong form can damage the business.
Think of paying for a car. You could dip into your own savings — that is internal finance, cheap and yours, but it drains your reserves. You could borrow from a bank and pay it back with interest — that is loan capital, quick to arrange but a fixed cost whether or not the car earns its keep. You could ask a partner to chip in and co-own it — that is share capital, no repayments but now you share the steering wheel. Or you could lease it and simply pay to use it without ever owning it. Same car, four very different deals — and the best deal depends on how much you need, what for, and how much risk and control you can live with.
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Work out the purpose and the amount. A small day-to-day cash gap needs a very different source from a factory that will last twenty years.
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Look inside first. Can retained profit, the sale of an unused asset, sale and leaseback or the owner's personal funds cover it without paying anyone outside?
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If not, choose an external source that matches. Short-term needs suit overdrafts, trade credit and short loans; long-term needs suit share capital, long-term loans, leasing and hire purchase.
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Weigh cost, risk, gearing and control, then commit. The right source is the one whose term, cost and control implications fit this business's purpose and its ability to bear risk.
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Full topic notes
Formal explanation with the rigour you need for the exam.
The core split: internal versus external finance
The first question to ask about any source of finance is where the money comes from. Internal finance is raised from within the business itself, using resources it already has. External finance is injected from outside — from lenders, investors, suppliers or the government. Internal sources are generally cheaper and involve no loss of control, but the amount available is capped by how profitable and asset-rich the business is. External sources can supply far larger sums, but usually carry a cost, a repayment obligation, or a dilution of ownership. Established businesses almost always use a blend of the two.
External sources are more numerous, and it helps to group them by what they actually are: borrowing (debt), selling ownership (equity), supplier arrangements, and specialist or public funding. Each answers a different need.
Retained profit: profit kept after tax and dividends and reinvested. Internal and long-term; no interest, no dilution of ownership — but only available to profitable firms, and money spent one way cannot be spent another.
Sale of assets: selling assets the business no longer needs (surplus machinery, vehicles, land). Turns idle assets into cash, but can only be done once per asset and may be slow to sell at a fair price.
Sale and leaseback: selling an asset the business still uses — typically its premises — and leasing it straight back. Releases the cash tied up in the asset while keeping its use, at the cost of ongoing lease payments and lost ownership.
Personal funds (owner's capital): the owner's own savings put into the business. Cheap and immediate — the mainstay for sole traders and partnerships — but limited to the owner's wealth and puts that wealth at risk.
Share capital: money raised by selling shares. External, long-term EQUITY — never repaid, no interest — but dilutes ownership and control, and only companies (Ltd/plc) can use it.
Loan capital: a lump sum borrowed and repaid over a set term with interest. DEBT finance — keeps ownership intact but adds fixed repayments, usually needs collateral, and raises gearing.
Overdraft: a facility to withdraw more than the account holds, up to a limit. Short-term and flexible, interest only on what is used — but high rates and repayable on demand.
Trade credit: buying now and paying the supplier later (30–90 days). Short-term and interest-free working capital, but limited in size and costly to supplier goodwill if abused.
Leasing: paying to use an asset owned by a lessor, never owning it. Avoids a big upfront outlay and often bundles maintenance, but total cost can exceed buying.
Hire purchase: a deposit plus instalments, ending in OWNERSHIP of the asset. Spreads the cost, but instalments carry interest and the asset can be repossessed if payments stop.
Crowdfunding: many small contributions raised online for rewards, pre-orders or equity. Raises finance and tests demand at once, but can fail publicly and expose the idea.
Business angels: wealthy individuals investing their own money plus expertise into start-ups for equity. Finance and mentoring, but a share of ownership goes with it.
Venture capital: specialist firms investing larger, pooled sums into high-growth businesses for equity and influence. Big money, but real loss of control and pressure to grow fast.
Microfinance: small loans for low-income entrepreneurs shut out of mainstream banks. Widens access to finance, but sums are small and interest can be high.
Government grants: sums given (not lent) to encourage activity such as job creation or R&D. No repayment, but competitive, condition-heavy and usually partial.
Matching the term of finance to its purpose
Sources of finance are also classified by how long the money is needed. The golden rule is to match the term of the finance to the life of what it funds. Short-term finance — up to about a year — covers day-to-day working-capital needs, such as paying wages or bridging the gap before customers pay. Long-term finance — several years or more — funds major, long-lived assets such as premises, machinery or expansion. Getting this match wrong is expensive: funding a twenty-year factory with a repayable-on-demand overdraft means the debt falls due long before the factory has earned its cost, while using long-term share capital to plug a one-week cash gap needlessly dilutes ownership.
Short-term finance (up to ~1 year): manages working capital and cash flow. Sources: overdraft, trade credit, short bank loans. Flexible and fast, but usually higher-cost per pound and quickly repayable.
Long-term finance (several years+): funds long-lived assets and expansion. Sources: share capital, long-term loans, leasing, hire purchase, retained profit. Larger and more stable, but commits the business for years.
The matching principle: short-lived need → short-term source; long-lived asset → long-term source. A mismatch either forces early repayment or over-commits the business.
Debt, equity, gearing and control
A recurring strategic choice runs beneath these sources: debt versus equity. Debt finance (loans, overdrafts, hire purchase) must be repaid with interest whether or not the business is profitable, so it raises financial risk — but it keeps ownership in the founders' hands. Equity finance (share capital, business angels, venture capital) never has to be repaid and pays no fixed interest, but every new investor takes a slice of ownership and a say in decisions. The balance between the two is captured by gearing: the proportion of capital that comes from debt. Highly geared firms carry heavy fixed interest costs and are vulnerable if profits or sales fall; low-geared firms are safer but may be leaving cheap borrowing — and faster growth — on the table. Gearing therefore sits at the heart of the trade-off between risk and control.
Debt finance: repaid with interest regardless of profit; keeps ownership; raises gearing and financial risk. Cheaper than equity when profits are strong and stable.
Equity finance: no repayment, no fixed interest; dilutes ownership and control; lowers gearing. Safer in downturns but shares future profits.
Gearing: high gearing = heavy reliance on debt = higher fixed costs and risk; low gearing = safer but possibly under-using cheap finance. The right level depends on the stability of the industry and cash flows.
The factors influencing the choice of source
There is no universally best source of finance — the right one depends on the business and its situation. Six factors do most of the work in the exam. Cost: the interest, dividends, fees and total cost over time. Purpose: what the finance is for, and how long that asset will last. Amount: small sums suit internal or short-term sources, large sums may need share or loan capital. Legal structure: only incorporated companies can issue share capital, which rules it out for sole traders and partnerships. Level of risk: a risky venture or a firm with no trading history may be refused bank lending and pushed toward equity or grants. And gearing/control: debt raises gearing and risk but preserves ownership, while equity avoids repayments but hands over control. A strong answer weighs these factors against the specific business and commits to a justified choice.
Cost: compare interest, dividends and fees, and the total cost over the life of the finance — the cheapest headline rate is not always the cheapest overall.
Purpose: match the source to what the money buys and how long it lasts — working capital versus a long-lived asset.
Amount: internal and short-term sources suit small needs; large needs may require share capital or a substantial loan.
Legal structure: share capital is open only to companies (Ltd/plc); sole traders and partnerships rely on personal funds, loans, leasing and the like.
Level of risk: start-ups and high-risk ventures may be unable to secure loans and turn instead to equity, crowdfunding, angels or grants.
Gearing/control: debt keeps control but raises gearing and financial risk; equity lowers risk but dilutes ownership — the decisive factor is often how much control the owners will surrender.
Anchor every source recommendation to the case study's own details — the amount needed, what it is for, the firm's legal structure and its appetite for risk. 'As a sole trader with no shares to sell, share capital is not an option, so...' or 'because the vans will last several years, a short-term overdraft is the wrong match...' shows the examiner you are applying the factors, not reciting them. The application marks live in that link between the source and THIS business.
Common mistakes examiners penalise
Recommending share capital to a sole trader or partnership — only incorporated companies (Ltd/plc) can issue shares. Suggesting share capital to an unincorporated business is a factual error that undermines the whole answer.
Confusing an overdraft with a loan — an overdraft is short-term, flexible and repayable on demand with interest only on what is used; a loan is a fixed lump sum repaid over a set term with scheduled interest. They suit different purposes and are not interchangeable.
Mismatching the term of finance to the purpose — funding a long-lived asset (premises, machinery) with a short-term source like an overdraft, or using long-term share capital to plug a brief cash-flow gap. Match short-term sources to short-term needs and long-term sources to long-lived assets.
Treating retained profit or grants as 'free' with no downside — retained profit is limited to profitable firms and, once spent, is unavailable elsewhere (an opportunity cost); grants are competitive, conditional and usually only partial. Neither is a limitless free lunch.
Confusing leasing with hire purchase — with hire purchase the business owns the asset after the final instalment; with leasing it only ever pays to use the asset and never owns it. State which one actually transfers ownership.
Confusing debt and equity, or business angels and venture capital — loans are debt (repaid with interest, no ownership lost); share capital is equity (no repayment, ownership diluted). Angels invest their own money in early-stage start-ups; venture capital firms invest larger pooled sums in proven high-growth firms.
Listing advantages and disadvantages without applying them — a bare list of pros and cons earns AO1 only. Marks climb when each point is tied to the specific business, its amount, purpose and risk.
Recommending without a supported judgement — a 'recommend' or 'evaluate' answer that gives both sides but never commits to a justified conclusion, matched to purpose, amount and risk, cannot reach the top band.
Model answer — marked the way our engine marks it
Business Management 3.2 is assessed against three objectives: AO1 rewards relevant knowledge of the sources of finance, AO2 rewards applying that knowledge to the specific business in the stimulus, and AO3 rewards analysis and a balanced evaluation. In the analytic/points scheme each distinct valid point earns credit, but the higher 'recommend' and 'evaluate' marks are reserved for answers that combine APPLICATION to context with a BALANCED evaluation that ends in a SUPPORTED JUDGEMENT matched to purpose, amount and risk. Watch how the marks below attach to applied, two-sided reasoning and a justified conclusion — never to a generic list.
Where this leads
The choices in this topic feed directly into the rest of the finance and accounts unit. The internal/external and debt/equity distinctions underpin costs and revenues and the final accounts, where loan interest, share capital and retained profit all appear; gearing links forward to profitability and liquidity ratio analysis; and the matching of finance to purpose returns in cash-flow forecasting and investment appraisal. Master the habit built here — identify which sources the business can actually use, match them to the purpose, amount and risk, weigh cost and control, then commit to a justified judgement — and you have the template that earns marks across every finance evaluation question in Business Management.
Worked examples
See the formulas applied — reveal one step at a time, like the exam.
Distinguish between an internal and an external source of finance, using an example of each. [4]
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Model answer. An internal source of finance is money raised from within the business itself, without involving any outside party. For example, retained profit — the profit a business keeps after paying tax and dividends — can be reinvested to fund new equipment. Because the money already belongs to the business, it carries no interest and does not dilute ownership.
A profitable manufacturer needs $600,000 to build a new warehouse expected to last 25 years. It is considering a long-term bank loan or issuing new share capital. Analyse how gearing and control might influence this choice. [6]
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Model answer. Because the warehouse is a long-lived asset, both options are appropriately long-term, so the decision turns on gearing and control rather than the term of finance.
Recommend the most appropriate source of finance for a sole trader wishing to buy new delivery vans. [10]
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Model answer. The sole trader needs finance for a specific, long-lived asset — delivery vans that will be used for several years — so the source should be long- or medium-term, and, crucially, because the business is a sole trader it cannot issue share capital: only incorporated companies can sell shares. That immediately rules out equity and focuses the choice on sources open to an unincorporated business. Three realistic options stand out: a bank loan, leasing (or hire purchase), and retained profit or personal funds.
How it all connects
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Glossary
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Quick check
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Revision flashcards
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Internal finance
Finance raised from within the business itself, without going to outside parties. Sources: retained profit, sale of assets, sale and leaseback and the owner's personal funds. Generally cheaper and involves no loss of control, but the amount available is limited.
Key takeaways
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- ✓
Retained profit: profit kept after tax and dividends and reinvested. Internal and long-term; no interest, no dilution of ownership — but only available to profitable firms, and money spent one way cannot be spent another.
- ✓
Sale of assets: selling assets the business no longer needs (surplus machinery, vehicles, land). Turns idle assets into cash, but can only be done once per asset and may be slow to sell at a fair price.
- ✓
Sale and leaseback: selling an asset the business still uses — typically its premises — and leasing it straight back. Releases the cash tied up in the asset while keeping its use, at the cost of ongoing lease payments and lost ownership.
- ✓
Personal funds (owner's capital): the owner's own savings put into the business. Cheap and immediate — the mainstay for sole traders and partnerships — but limited to the owner's wealth and puts that wealth at risk.
Practice — then mark it
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Get a Paper 2 question marked: recommend the most appropriate source of finance for a business, applying the concepts and reaching a supported judgement matched to purpose, amount and risk
Get a Paper 2 question marked: recommend the most appropriate source of finance for a business, applying the concepts and reaching a supported judgement matched to purpose, amount and risk
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