Frame the decision
We translate the business event into a capital question: fund, lease, refinance, monetize, preserve bank capacity, seek incentives, route to a specialist, or wait for better facts.
Boutique capital intelligence for investment-grade CFOs
CFO Signals gives finance leaders a smarter capital markets review before cash, revolver capacity, lease obligations, board attention, or one supplier path gets locked in.
The first product
A Capital Opportunity Scan is not a lender pitch and not another dashboard. It is a concise advisory memo that helps a CFO see the likely financing, lease, equipment, tax, incentive, real estate, and liquidity routes before the organization commits to one answer.
Start with one decision: a new facility, a lease renewal, a buildout, an equipment program, a debt maturity, a tax basis question, an incentive window, or an asset-backed liquidity question. The output is written for the CFO, but useful to treasury, FP&A, tax, real estate, procurement, operating teams, auditors, lenders, and outside advisors.
We translate the business event into a capital question: fund, lease, refinance, monetize, preserve bank capacity, seek incentives, route to a specialist, or wait for better facts.
We compare equipment finance, lease-backed CapEx, bank capacity, private credit, tax review, incentives, owned real estate, tenant improvements, supplier terms, and other capital paths.
We identify the project budget, lease package, asset schedule, work letter, maturity schedule, incentive agreement, procurement file, or accounting preference that would change the answer.
The scan becomes a forwardable memo for treasury, tax, real estate, FP&A, capital markets, procurement, board, sponsor, auditor, lender, or advisor conversations.
What the memo contains
One page that says what the event appears to be, why it matters now, which capital routes deserve attention, and what the CFO should ask next.
Public company filings, public project records, press releases, leases, capital plans, investor materials, procurement traces, incentive records, or other public-source receipts where available.
A clear comparison of cash use, bank debt, private credit, equipment finance, lease finance, supplier finance, real estate, tax, incentive, and specialist-advisor paths.
What is verified, what is inferred, what is only a breadcrumb, and what should not be used until the company supplies private context.
The smallest non-public facts that would materially improve the answer: asset schedule, project budget, lease term, work letter, lender consent, tax basis, or accounting objective.
A short set of questions the CFO, treasurer, or analyst can hand to a lender, lessor, tax advisor, incentive consultant, broker, auditor, or internal project owner.
Review patterns
The scan pattern is simple: define the decision, surface routes, label confidence, avoid overclaiming, and ask for the smallest private-data unlock that would change the answer.
Review leasehold improvements, tenant improvements, equipment, FF&E, technology, project assets, tax basis, asset schedules, leases, and financing history before assuming the only answer is new debt.
Map expansion, relocation, new lease, manufacturing, automation, lab, healthcare, logistics, data center, headquarters, and recurring buildout programs against the available capital routes.
Compare bank, private credit, equipment, lease, real estate, incentive, tax, supplier, and specialty-provider options before a single vendor frames the whole decision.
What a scan can surface
Tenant improvements, leasehold improvements, work letters, allowances, landlord-funded improvements, fixtures, buildouts, data rooms, labs, offices, distribution sites, and production facilities.
Manufacturing lines, automation, robotics, fleet, material handling, clinical or lab equipment, technology infrastructure, furniture, fixtures, and other long-lived operating assets.
New plants, relocations, expansions, facility upgrades, recurring store or clinic programs, acquisition integration, sponsor-backed growth plans, and board-approved capital projects.
Refinancing windows, maturity walls, revolver usage, cash preservation, working-capital pressure, credit-rating considerations, covenant headroom, and alternatives to drawing bank capacity.
Incentive packages, grants, abatements, credits, accelerated depreciation, cost segregation questions, project-location economics, and public-sector programs that may change the capital decision.
Specialist lenders, lease finance providers, equipment lessors, real estate capital, private credit, incentive advisors, tax advisors, CRE advisors, auditors, and capital markets professionals.
Questions CFO Signals helps answer
What are the available routes before we use cash or revolver capacity? Which assets could support lease finance, equipment finance, incentives, or a supplier-backed structure?
What does the lease term, TI package, work letter, landlord contribution, and expected equipment spend imply for capital structure and future flexibility?
Which parts of the project are real estate, equipment, technology, FF&E, operating expense, tax basis, or incentive-sensitive, and who should review each route?
Can asset-backed, lease-backed, equipment, incentive, or working-capital options reduce pressure on the main debt package or create a cleaner negotiation with lenders?
Which specialist should be called first, and what fact pattern should they receive so the CFO gets an answer instead of a generic pitch?
Is the apparent blocker really credit, collateral, accounting treatment, lease term, lender consent, missing documents, project size, or simply the wrong supplier route?
Best fit
CFO Signals is strongest where a credit-worthy organization has meaningful physical assets, recurring CapEx, real estate or lease complexity, equipment programs, expansion pressure, or capital markets decisions that cut across multiple advisor lanes.
Guardrails
Source receipts, public facts, current triggers, named assets, possible routes, and the specific diligence question that changes the answer help separate known facts from assumptions.
Verified, inferred, estimated, breadcrumb, and not-actionable facts are separated so the CFO can use the memo without mistaking research for diligence.
No tax, legal, accounting, securities, brokerage, or financing conclusions. No promise that a public headline number equals eligible capital.
FAQ
A Capital Opportunity Scan is a source-backed memo for one capital event. It identifies public facts, possible financing and advisory routes, confidence labels, private-data unlocks, and the next questions that would make the answer more useful.
No. CFO Signals is supplier-neutral capital intelligence and decision support. The goal is to help the CFO understand the route map before a lender, lessor, tax advisor, incentive consultant, broker, or other provider frames the answer.
The strongest fit is a credit-worthy company with real capital decisions: expansion, leases, equipment, recurring CapEx, refinancing, incentives, asset-backed liquidity, or complex advisor routing. Public, private, sponsor-backed, and nonprofit institutions can all fit if the capital event is real.
Start with a company name, the decision being reviewed, rough timing, public links if useful, and the business question. Do not send confidential documents through the public form. If private materials are needed later, we will define the right transfer path.
A generic AI summary can describe a company. CFO Signals is built around route judgment: what the event means for a CFO, which capital paths may matter, what evidence supports the view, what remains unknown, and who should be asked next.
Request a scan
Tell us about an expansion, lease, equipment program, CapEx approval, maturity, incentive window, liquidity question, asset unlock, or capital markets review. We will respond with the right next step for a Capital Opportunity Scan.