This article will look at accounts receivable factoring. A mechanism that helps
business to free up cash flow.
The pace of change in today’s business
environment is inarguably staggering. Growth of e-commerce; changes to business
structures; evolving relationships; changes to funding arrangements; access to
capital and its sources. All occurring at increasingly exponential rates. Fast.
The fact that there is more computing power in the average notebook computer
today than it took to put a man on the moon should illustrate how fast things
change, and whether in senior management or a business owner you need to keep
pace.
In particular, you must stay abreast of changes in your
competitive environment, and remain fully apprised of mechanisms that will
enable a response fast enough to keep you in the game. This article will look at
one of those mechanisms, access to capital and through that, free cash flow. In
doing so we’ll use an intuitive framework, peppered with some economics. Why?
Intuitive analysis is ideal for answering specific questions; in this case ‘What
will best enable my firm to manage rapid changes to competitive economic
conditions and stay in the game?’ And I’ll use economics because of Steven
Levitt, America’s most outstanding economist under-40, who along with Stephen
Dubner considers that ‘if morality represents how we would like the world to
work, then economics represents how it actually does work.’
By speaking
to specific anchor points, strategic issues affecting the access to capital
problem can be explored and initiatives developed to allow a timely solution. In
short, it’s the fastest and most accurate way to answer the question you face,
because it’s easier to understand and doesn’t get bogged down in extraneous,
unnecessary analysis.
One of the anchor points in contemporary business
is access to capital, especially when it helps maintain free cash-flow. In many
respects they are one and the same thing, the difference merely being access to
capital is a necessary precursor to free cash flow (you can’t use it until you
have it). And everyone needs it. Payroll, materials, overhead, and debtors
taking anywhere from 45 to 120 days to settle their accounts, using your firm as
a surrogate line of credit.
Access to capital becomes an even larger
issue in the business environment described earlier, where speed to market and
the ability to ‘tool-up’ (increase production) are crucial to meeting ever
shrinking delivery timelines. Many of us have experienced the elation of being
awarded a large tender, something that will fill the order book for the next six
months, immediately followed by the hangover that comes with the realization
that the firm will struggle to fund the project based on existing and forecast
cash flow.
Small-to-medium enterprises encounter particular problems
when it comes to cash flow and capital access to fund growing operations, to the
point where lack of access is an issue that can threaten continuing operations,
even in a rising market. Balance sheets take time to build, and it is against
this security that banks will lend.
Developing initiatives to tackle
this problem involves looking at some existing options and making a comparison,
arriving at a decision that best enables a solution to the problem at hand. In
this instance, a comparison of bank funding against invoice factoring provides
insight into possible solutions for the capital access / cash flow problem.
Everyday economics can inform this comparison, particularly the study of
incentives - how people get what they want, or need, especially when other
people want or need the same thing. Let’s start with banks.
Bank lending
requirements are invasive and restrictive. They often engender a feeling that
you have to ‘bare all’ to borrow a nickel. They would naturally dispute this
claim, but let’s return to the incentives – what is their incentive for lending
you money? To earn a return off your efforts. Certainly nothing short of this,
and these days they also use lending as a lever to win the biggest ‘share of
your wallet’ from their rivals, trying to have you as a customer for life,
‘growing with you and your business.’ When you add the fact that a surplus of
people requiring credit exist in the market, they can afford to be choosy and do
the economically rational thing – be risk averse. Risk aversion drives the
mortgage a bank puts on your house to ensure they get paid, and is what drives
them to lend against strong balance sheets. They look at balance sheets in an
accounting fashion, weighing up tangible, realizable, liquid assets like cash
and real property, apply a formula and lend in accordance with how the result
stack up against their risk matrix. Your continuing success is of interest to
them only to the extent that it enables you to service (and ultimately repay)
your debt, generating an ongoing margin on their investment.
An overly
simplistic description, the point being to illustrate that all of this takes
time, and is structured around heavy regulation and evaluation constraints. Lots
of time, and lots of influential rules. First, for you to build your balance
sheet, and second, to get it appraised to a point where your banker might open
or extend your credit facility. During that time, the window of opportunity to
fund that large project, manufacturing expansion, or operations in a rising
market quickly passes, leaving you out of pocket your application fee and if
successful, servicing an even larger debt you might not need.
Turning to
invoice factors, the incentives might seem the same, but how they view obtaining
their return is slightly different. While banks rely on their acumen in
accurately predicting your ability to repay a debt, invoice factors rely on
their skills in accurately assessing the ability of your customer base to pay
you. A lower perceived risk aversion with invoice factors plays a small part,
but it is how the factor views the overall situation that is different from
traditional lending. To begin with, factors recognize your accounts receivables
as assets, just like the bank. The difference is that an invoice factor
considers your receivables a quickly realizable asset, and is prepared to
purchase the rights (and risks) of collecting your outstanding invoices.
Put another way, in economic terms the invoice factor recognizes your
receivables as assets with a future value in cash flow terms, and provided their
assessment of your customers is favorable, they are prepared to effectively
‘provide a market’ for those assets. This ‘market’ closes with your transaction
selling them the invoice however; there is no secondary market like junk bonds
or other derivatives.
Access to capital through factors is more
expensive than traditional lending, and this is due to the risk premium attached
not to you, but your customer base. This is not surprising, and you and I would
probably do the same. Returning again to economics and our study of incentives,
a rational person requires a premium for every extra unit of risk they take on.
A bigger incentive for a perceived higher risk. In the case of factoring, the
premium is higher than equivalent bank lending rates, as the risks are
considered slightly higher when the security is not real property, rather a
first position claim over all of your receivables. Your risk exposure is lower
than collecting the receivables yourself (invoice factors are very good at
mercantile operations) – the higher fee charged by the factor compared to the
bank is simply the premium you must pay to lower that exposure.
The
difference that factors provide is speed of access to capital, and what happens
when you default. Default on the bank loan, you can lose your business, even the
family home. Factoring is not quite as drastic, although the sums of money
involved are invariably smaller. There are two types of factoring products
available, recourse and non-recourse, and again, the difference comes down to
assumption of risk, and the premium asked to assume the risk of non-payment on
an invoice. With recourse factoring, you remain liable for non-payment by your
customer, and with non-recourse, the factor assumes the risk up to a point, and
at a higher premium.
In summary, there are merits and pitfalls in both
traditional lending and factoring. These are volatile economic times, and having
been burnt a number of times during boom times of the previous two decades,
banks are far more risk averse, holding tight reign on their credit standards.
So in light of this information, we return to our problem, looking to answer the
question: ‘Which of these approaches best delivers the flexibility I require to
allow me the opportunity to prosper in a fast-changing business environment?’
For many businesses, the answer lies with invoice factoring, which
delivers in excess of $1 trillion in credit across the continental United
States. As with all business situations there are caveats, or described another
way, arrangements that if not continually monitored can become a comfortable
security blanket that might actually be slowly suffocating you.
It is
easy to become accustomed to continuing access to cash flow through factoring.
It is also easy to feel at ease knowing you are backed by a massive publicly
traded institution like your bank. Management and owners of Small and
Medium-Sized Enterprises should continually remind themselves that the study of
incentives works for them too. Constant review of your capital funding and cash
flow arrangements is essential to ensure that the deal you end up with is the
best for your firm, and not others. It’s all about getting what you want, or
need, especially when other people want or need the same thing.
Photo
attribution:
Dave Dugdale / www.rentvine.com / CC by 2.0
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