Electro Optic Systems (ASX:EOS) $100m Facility Secured, But at a 14.75% Price Tag
More Firepower for Working Capital and Growth
Electro Optic Systems (ASX:EOS) announced today that it now has access to a $100 million credit facility that it can draw down on if and when the business needs additional cash.
That distinction is important. This is not an immediate $100 million debt hit that suddenly appears on EOS’s balance sheet. Instead, it gives the company the option to access that capital when needed, whether that is to help fund larger contracts, support working capital, or assist with the rollout of new weapons systems.
It means EOS has added another funding source it can tap into if growth opportunities accelerate or if contract execution requires more cash upfront.
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Cash Rich, Debt Free, Now With a $100m Safety Net
That said, the structure of the facility is just as important as the headline number. This is a two-year secured loan facility, with a subsidiary of Washington H. Soul Pattinson agreeing to provide up to $100 million.
The interest rate is 14.75%, which is undeniably high. To me, that signals this is not cheap capital, and it does suggest the lender is pricing in a meaningful level of risk. In other words, while the facility gives EOS financial flexibility, it also comes at a cost that investors should pay close attention to.
Not a Balance Sheet Red Flag
When you step back and look at EOS’s financial position, the company is actually in a fairly healthy place.
EOS paid off all of its debt in 2025 and is sitting on roughly $106 million in cash. So even with an interest rate of around 14%, the company is in a position where it could comfortably manage this facility if it ever needed to. On that basis, the balance sheet does not look stretched.
More importantly, we do not think investors should assume EOS plans to fully draw down the entire facility. In my view, it is far more likely to be used as a backup source of financing that gives the company added flexibility as it grows.
There are really two main reasons this facility matters when looked at alongside the company’s existing cash position.
The first is working capital. Defence businesses can be lumpy by nature. Cash flows are not always smooth, because companies often need to build inventory ahead of delivery, manage long project cycles, and wait on milestone-based payments. That can create timing gaps, even when the broader business is performing well.
The second is strategic expansion. An acquisition such as MARSS can come with staged payments, completion costs, integration spending, or short-term funding gaps that need to be bridged. In that context, having access to additional capital gives EOS more room to execute without having to rely solely on the cash already on hand.
So to us, the key takeaway is not that EOS suddenly needs debt. It is that the company has put an extra layer of financial flexibility in place. With a clean balance sheet and a solid cash position already there, this facility looks more like a growth backstop than a sign of financial stress.
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