Modelling

FAST-Compliant Modelling: Why It Matters for Lender Approval

A FAST-standard model is not a style preference — it is a prerequisite for credit-committee approval. What changes when your model is truly FAST-compliant.

AuthorMr. Arslan Shahid
PublishedDecember 2025
Read time5 min read
TopicModelling

FAST — Flexible, Appropriate, Structured, Transparent — is the financial modelling standard adopted across project finance, infrastructure, and increasingly across corporate transaction modelling. For lender approval on serious project-finance mandates, a FAST-compliant model is no longer a stylistic preference. It is the entry ticket to a credit committee that takes you seriously.

What "FAST-compliant" actually means

Every word in the FAST acronym is operationally specific:

  • Flexible — assumptions are isolated, time series are time-coherent, and structural changes don't require model rebuilds.
  • Appropriate — the model fits the decision it supports; it is neither over-engineered nor under-built.
  • Structured — sheets are organized by purpose (inputs, calculations, outputs); workings are linear, with no left-pointing or upward-pointing references.
  • Transparent — every input is sourced, every calculation is auditable, and a third-party reviewer can navigate the model without a verbal handover.

The lender's actual test

Credit-committee analysts have one fundamental test they run on every model: can I rebuild any number in this model from a defined chain of inputs and formulas, in under ten minutes, without calling the sponsor?

If yes, the model passes the credibility test. If no, the model — and by extension the sponsor's commercial seriousness — fails the credibility test. This is the test FAST exists to ensure your model passes.

"A lender does not approve a model. A lender approves a sponsor — and the model is the most visible evidence of how seriously that sponsor takes the financing process."

The four most common failures

Across the project-finance models we have reviewed for sponsors and audited for lenders, four problems recur:

  • Hard-coded numbers inside formulas — any reviewer who finds this loses confidence immediately.
  • Inconsistent time series — periods don't line up, opening and closing balances don't reconcile, days conventions vary by sheet.
  • Circular references resolved by IF statements — a workaround that hides the underlying logic error; circulars should be handled architecturally.
  • Output sheets that don't tie back — the executive summary on Tab 1 doesn't tie to the working sheet on Tab 7. Every reviewer notices.

What changes when you go FAST

Three things change measurably:

  • Credit committee time compresses. Questions during diligence drop by half. The model answers them in advance.
  • Sensitivity becomes a feature, not an exercise. Stress scenarios are run by changing input cells, not by rebuilding sheets.
  • Post-financial-close use of the model becomes possible. The same model becomes the budget, the performance tracker, and the refinancing input file.

The model audit option

Where a model has been built in-house but will support a credit-committee decision, a third-party FAST audit is a low-cost, high-value step. The auditor's report — covering logic, accuracy, integrity, and FAST conformity — accompanies the model into the credit committee and meaningfully shortens the diligence process.

A model is a serious document. Built to FAST, it earns the credibility it needs. Built without, it becomes the weakest link in an otherwise strong sponsor proposition.

Share this article
← Previous article ← Back to all articles

Considering a transaction, a capital raise, or a strategic review?

Schedule a confidential introductory conversation with one of our partners.

Speak to a Partner →