Case Study: How OMV Discount Shaped a BMV Funding Structure
Understanding how Open Market Value (OMV) is applied within a below market value (BMV) funding structure is best demonstrated through real-world transactions. While theoretical models often suggest loan amounts are driven purely by OMV multiplied by lender loan-to-value (LTV) limits, actual deal structuring is often more nuanced.
This case study demonstrates how discount depth, lender safeguards, and valuation methodology combined to reshape the eventual funding package on a BMV acquisition — and why specialist lender selection was key to achieving a workable outcome.
For a full explanation of the valuation mechanics behind BMV lending, see our technical guide on How Open Market Value Is Used in BMV Bridging Calculations, which details the core principles referenced throughout this case study.
The Acquisition Scenario
An experienced buy-to-let investor identified an off-market two-bedroom terraced property in the North West of England. The vendor required a rapid sale due to inheritance probate resolution, creating an opportunity to agree a discounted purchase price.
Headline numbers:
• Independent OMV: £210,000
• Agreed purchase price: £167,000
• Discount vs OMV: 20.4%
• Property condition: Habitable but dated, requiring cosmetic refurbishment only.
• Intended exit: Refinance onto a long-term buy-to-let mortgage after a short seasoning period.
On paper, the discount comfortably exceeded most lenders’ minimum BMV thresholds, indicating strong potential for maximised leverage.
The Initial Loan Expectation
The borrower assumed a straightforward funding model:
• LTV target: 70% of OMV
• Expected loan: £147,000
Estimated cash requirement:
• Purchase shortfall: £20,000
• Fees & stamp duty: ~£10,000
• Light refurbishment: £8,000
Total estimated input: ~£38,000
This scenario relied upon full OMV recognition within lender calculations.
The Lender Reality Check
The originally approached funder applied a “day-one equity containment rule” frequently used by mainstream BMV-capable lenders.
Despite accepting the £210,000 OMV figure, the lender imposed:
• Maximum advance capped at 75% of purchase price, not OMV
Revised funding:
• Loan advanced: £125,250 (75% × £167,000)
• Borrower contribution increased to ~£60,000
Effectively, the lender neutralised much of the discount advantage by reducing immediate leverage exposure — a risk control strategy designed to limit artificial equity extraction at completion.
Funding Restructuring
To restore the economics of the deal, the broker repositioned the transaction with a specialist lender more flexible toward OMV-based calculations.
This alternative lender:
• Accepted the full OMV for LTV purposes
• Applied a 70% LTV directly to OMV
• Did not enforce day-one equity blending
Final funding achieved:
• Loan amount: £147,000
• Net borrower input reduced to ~£41,000
The revised structure reinstated the original leverage objective and allowed the client to retain liquidity for additional acquisitions.
Title Seasoning & Exit Planning
A core part of the funding strategy involved securing a refinance exit that allowed capital to be released as soon as refurbishments were completed, rather than being limited by the six-month ownership policies common among high-street lenders.
While many high-street lenders operate strict seasoning policies, a number of specialist buy-to-let lenders are prepared to complete refinances within the six-month period where value has been demonstrably added. In this case, refinance eligibility was supported through:
• Photographic evidence documenting pre- and post-works improvements
• Detailed invoices and contractor schedules confirming refurbishment expenditure
• Valuer confirmation within the refinance valuation report that the uplift reflected genuine works rather than short-term market fluctuation
This evidence package enabled the new lender to base mortgage calculations on the updated market valuation rather than the original purchase price, allowing for early refinancing without waiting for prolonged title seasoning.
Why This Deal Structure Worked
This case highlights several important realities that shape BMV funding outcomes:
1️⃣ Discount Depth Does Not Guarantee Leverage
Even with discounts exceeding 20%, lender policy — not valuation — determines whether OMV can be fully utilised at completion.
2️⃣ Lender Equity Controls Matter
Day-one blending policies can materially reshape borrower cash exposure, often more than the valuation impact itself.
3️⃣ Specialist Broker Selection Is Essential
Access to OMV-based funding depends less on headline lender criteria and more on specialist broker expertise in identifying funders whose underwriting genuinely supports discounted acquisitions. Experienced brokers such as Evolve Finance navigate these policy variations to match transactions with lenders that recognise legitimate valuation uplift and avoid restrictive day-one equity caps.
In this case, correct broker-led lender selection ensured the full OMV could be applied to the loan calculation, restoring the intended leverage that more rigid funding models would have constrained.
4️⃣ Exit Structuring Is as Important as Entry Lending
Understanding refinance seasoning criteria ensures that discounted acquisitions genuinely release capital — rather than simply deferring funding risk.
Strategic Insight
BMV transactions only perform optimally when:
• OMV mechanics are correctly matched to lender criteria
• Equity containment rules are identified early
• Exit refinance assumptions are stress-tested
These considerations determine whether leveraged acquisitions function as intended or become unexpectedly capital-intensive.
For a full overview of how lenders structure OMV-based BMV transactions — including typical safeguards, eligibility thresholds, and refinance planning considerations — see our comprehensive hub resource, which outlines lender criteria, discount eligibility rules, and refinance pathways in detail: Below Market Value Bridging Loans – Complete UK Guide
Speak to our BMV Finance Expert