วันอังคารที่ 16 มีนาคม พ.ศ. 2553

Factoring Accounts Receivables in 2010


Factoring Accounts Receivables in 2010
Factoring was first documented in the American colonies before the revolution, at a time when materials and/or goods were shipped from the colonies to the Americas. Invoice factoring is not a loan but it's the purchase of financial assets, also known as receivables. It differs from traditional bank loans as follows. Bank loans involve two parties, and factoring involves three parties.



Factoring Accounts Receivables in 2010

Factoring Accounts Receivables in 2010

Many businesses have stayed in business today thanks to working capital garnered from invoice factoring for small business. Tight credit at mainstream banks has made it otherwise challenging.

First documented in the American colonies before the revolution, factoring started at a time when materials and/or goods were shipped from the colonies to the Americas. Invoice factoring is not a loan but it's the purchase of financial assets, also known as receivables. Factoring invoices differs from traditional bank loans as follows. Factoring involves three parties, while bank loans involve two parties.

Factoring is based on the value of the receivables. Banks base their decisions on a company's credit worthiness. Accounts receivables factoring benefits businesses that do not get paid for 30 to 60 or 90 days by advancing up to 90 percent against invoices. The factor generally looks at the creditworthiness of the client's customers and can fund within as little as 24 hours. Most companies do not expect to buy 100 percent of a company's receivables.

Factoring accounts receivables became more focused on the issue of credit, as factors guaranteed payment for approved customers, during the Industrial Revolution. Invoice factoring became more focused on the issue of credit during the Industrial revolution.

It was before 1930 in the United States when factoring occurred and it was primarily for the textile and garment industries, and then after the war years, factoring expanded to other types of businesses. When interest rates rose during the 1960's and 70's, private reasons became intensified and the 80's due to changes in the banking industry and interest rates. Typically small businesses have been forced to find other sources of financing for expansion and growth so factoring became more widespread.

it is easier to keep your cash flow flowing by factoring accounts receivables. That way you'll have the edge over the other guy, so you can order more supplies to build more products, keep your employees and sales staff on, and pay all your bills.

Invoice factoring is actually the purchase of financial assets, or receivables, from a factoring company. Using this financial tactic keeps your cash flow going, so small businesses can pay their bills, keep employees or staff, keep an edge over competition, order more supplies, build more products, and in turn sell more, and make more.

Factoring invoices doesn't work like traditional bank loans involving two parties, as factoring involves three parties. Banks usually base their decisions on a company's credit while factoring invoices is about the value of the accounts receivables for a company. There are no minimums or maximums, and no long-term commitments.

The Interface Financial Group, Inc. (IFG) has found that single invoice factoring is a popular new tactic allowing its clients to factor one invoice at a time. Projections ahead for the year 2010 include the fact that businesses will be factoring accounts receivables - less for survival and more for stability and growth.

Kristin Gabriel is a writer who works with The Interface Financial Group (IFG), North America's largest alternative funding source for small business. The company provides short-term financial resources including invoice factoring, serving clients in more than 30 industries in the United States, Canada, Australia and New Zealand. IFG offers expertise in factoring, accounting, finance, law, marketing and banking. Visit: http://www.ifgnetwork.com

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วันจันทร์ที่ 15 มีนาคม พ.ศ. 2553

The Basics of Accounts Receivable Factoring


The Basics of Accounts Receivable Factoring
Invoice factoring is a useful tool in acquiring much-needed working capital for businesses of any size. Even though factoring volume continues to grow each year, many business owners and financial executives aren't aware of this form of financing. This article explains some of the major components of accounts receivable factoring.



The Basics of Accounts Receivable Factoring
The Basics of Accounts Receivable Factoring

Invoice factoring is a useful tool in acquiring much-needed working capital for businesses of any size. Even though factoring volume continues to grow each year, many business owners and financial executives aren't aware of this form of financing. This article explains some of the major components of accounts receivable factoring.

Factoring is the sale of a company's business to business accounts receivable at a discount for immediate cash. Note that the services rendered or products sold must be to creditworthy business customers,not to individuals.

Important accounts receivable factoring terms:

Advance rate: The amount of cash the factoring company gives the client, expressed as a percentage of the invoice totals. Advance rates are typically between 70% and 85%, depending on several factors such as the overall credit standing of the customers and the type of industry the client is in.

Factor: The factor is the funding source for factoring transactions. Most of these companies are only involved with factoring and similar services such as purchase order funding.

Reserve: This represents the total amount of the invoices factored less the amount advanced by the factoring company. The reserve is remitted back to the client upon collection of the invoices less the factoring fee.

Letter of Intent: After the factoring company has received the application and other documents from the proposed customer and it appears that they can work with this client, a letter of intent is issued. The LOI specifies the proposed terms of the relationship, subject to due diligence.

UCC filing: The only collateral for a factoring relationship is the business receivables, so the factoring company files what is called a blanket UCC filing to protect its interests. When they make a UCC filing, they have a lien against the company's receivables in the event of bankruptcy.

Factoring fee: This is the cost to the client for the service and is usually expressed as a percentage of the receivables factored per 30 days. The fee can be anywhere from 2% to 4.5%, depending on the perceived risk of the account.

Due diligence: When a company applies for factoring, the funding source performs an investigation to:
(1) determine if there are liens on the receivables in question,
(2) validate the information contained in the application, and
(3) check the credit of the client's customers.

Subordination agreement: As stated above, the factor must have a "first position" on the receivables. In other words, they have the right to receive proceeds from the receivables in the event of default as a result of a blanket lien on the A/R. When another entity already has a lien on the receivables, the factor will require the bank, taxing authority or individual to release the encumbrance. The legal document that accomplishes the lien release is called a subordination agreement

Debtor notification: At the inception of the factoring relationship, the factor sends a letter to each business customer of the client. The letter explains that the company has entered into an agreement to manage the company's accounts receivables and that future payments are to be made to a new address. The debtor sends payments to a lock box that is controlled by the factoring company.

Spot factoring: Most factoring contracts require a minimum amount of factoring volume per month from the client. But there are other niche factors that allow the client to factor invoices only when needed. This type of funding is called spot factoring.

These terms are important to understand before entering into an agreement with a factoring company. The contract, which is usually for one year in length, should be studied thoroughly before signing on the dotted line.

Kent Harlan has been a CPA since 1984 and is the owner of Ozarks Capital Funding, a company offering alternative financial solutions for business and healthcare providers. We can give you a free, no-obligation invoice factoring quote. Just fill out our online application to get started.

Contact information: - EMAIL: kent.harlan@ocflink.com
- PHONE: (800) 560-4420
- WEB: http://www.ocflink.com

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วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 11 มีนาคม พ.ศ. 2553

Factoring In Account Receivables and Collections


Factoring In Account Receivables and Collections
The ventures accounts payable processing begins with the receipt of a customers purchase order authorization after they have received goods/services.



Factoring In Account Receivables and Collections
Factoring In Account Receivables and Collections

The account receivables factoring policy need not be rigid. You can make exceptions, for whatever reason. But, it is easier and better business when you have a policy to make exceptions from than when you are just making it up as you goes along.

Thus far, I have been writing about the written policy that you discuss with your customers ahead of time. There is another written policy which customers do not see. This one addresses those customers who are not willing to do business with you the way the basic policy states. This second policy lets your employees know how much they can deviate from the ideal policy.

In many businesses, it is essential that customers sign the policy, in addition to discussing it with them. Signing is required wherever there is a history of misinterpreting the policy or a history of nonpayment. Other than these situations, it isn't enough that you have a written policy. You explain it prior to doing business, and, wherever feasible. The customer also gets a copy of it. Another issue is the result of the new policy for paying your regular customers, compared with the new. New customers may or may not agree with your new policy for payment, but they have no basis for comparing it with your previous policy. But many of your current customers, some of whom have been paying you in accordance with their policy, will be deeply unhappy with the change.

If you think about it, this situation is about treating other people the way you would want to be treated. You'd want to know, in advance, what the rules of the game are and where your money is involved. You wouldn't want to be surprised. You wouldn't want one side to assume one conclusion if the other party could reasonably assume the opposite. That's why everything that can be spelled out must be. You certainly don't want to preside over a business where the payment policy depends on who you talk to, which is the case in far too many businesses today.

Collection Decisions

You begin with a decision about how long you will work on unpaid accounts and a policy for what to do during that time. I suggest that you make a decision to work on most accounts no longer than four months. Exceptions need management approval.

At the four-month point, uncollected accounts will either be written-off, sued in Small Claims, Municipal or Superior court, handled by an attorney, turned over to a collection agency or have a pre-collection letter series used on them. The discipline needed to bite the bullet at an early stage of delinquency is precisely what it takes to give an incentive to handle accounts systematically during the first four months. During that time, the key collection tool is the telephone. It is 10 times more productive than the most brilliantly written dunning message, because the phone provides feedback - it is a two-way communication.

The first phone call should occur no later than 10 days after sending the second statement. If the first statement has been ignored, there's no benefit to you in waiting another month to take action. You want to know where matters stand, and the sooner the better. Incidentally, there is no reason you must have a 30-day interval between statements, although that tradition has carried over from pre-computer days. Businesses and industries that have a high level of delinquent accounts often bill twice a month, which is far more effective than once a month.

For the latest tips on processing accounts receivable and collections, see: http://www.accountreceivables.org Account Receivables

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วันพุธที่ 10 มีนาคม พ.ศ. 2553

Things One Has to Look For Before Choosing an Account Receivable Factoring Firm


Things One Has to Look For Before Choosing an Account Receivable Factoring Firm
Main things one has to look for before choosing an account receivable factoring firm. There are many fake firms available in the market and hence before choosing an account receivable factoring firm everyone has to look for certain things and should ask certain questions to know about the firm.



Things One Has to Look For Before Choosing an Account Receivable Factoring Firm
Things One Has to Look For Before Choosing an Account Receivable Factoring Firm

An account receivable factoring firm provides great service to companies by reducing their tension in the cash flow. But at the same time there are many fake firms available in the market and hence before choosing an account receivable factoring firm everyone has to look for certain things and should ask certain questions to know about the firm. There are five things which everyone has to consider before getting into an account receivable factoring firm.

First one is that the firm you are choosing has to be familiar with your industry because then only it is easier for them and also for you to deal with them. Else it is merely waste of time as you have to explain all the conditions, payment methods and procedures of your company to them. Next thing one has to look for is the flexibility level they offer to their clients and they should answer all the questions in a proper manner. The questions which the business owner should ask are,

· Is there any need of personal guarantee for any unpaid invoices?
· Is the relationship valid for limited period of time?
· Should I sell all of my invoices?

Like this many questions they should ask to the representatives of the firm. The third one is the customer service a best account receiving firm is the one which provides great customer service. Because, if they didn't provide good customer service then their firm lacks quality and also check who are providing services. The fourth thing one should look is the stability of the firm because only if they are stable then you could get uninterrupted flow of cash to continue your business.

In case if they are not stable the tension increases and you cannot survive in your business. Hence before choosing a company is careful to check if they are affiliated with the International Factoring Association (IFA). Finally you have to check with the pricing of the factoring firm depending on the invoices. If all these are good then choose the same firm for account receiving factoring else look for any other firm which satisfy all the needs.

Account receivable factoring firm provides great service to companies by reducing their tension in the cash flow. Check our website at http://www.interstatecapital.com.

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วันจันทร์ที่ 8 มีนาคม พ.ศ. 2553

Accounts Receivable Factoring - What Is It All About?


Accounts Receivable Factoring - What Is It All About?
Many companies look to stay competitive in the world of today's business, many do so by unleashing the graces of cash flow. Accounts Receivable Factoring helps you do that. Factoring increases the cash flow by transferring the responsibility for the collection of your customer's debt and turning it into funds available for immediate use.



Accounts Receivable Factoring - What Is It All About?
Accounts Receivable Factoring - What Is It All About?

Many companies look to stay competitive in the world of today's business, many do so by unleashing the graces of cash flow. Accounts Receivable Factoring helps you do that. Factoring increases the cash flow by transferring the responsibility for the collection of your customer's debt and turning it into funds available for immediate use. The company will lend you money on your discounted accounts receivable and they will keep a percentage after they are collected.

Accounts Receivable Factoring is attractive for a series of reasons. The most popular benefit is the increment in working capital. You do not have just anyone looking after your accounts receivable, but you have professionals doing it. Their expertise guarantees that you collect your money faster that you would using your own resources.

If you are a small entrepreneur, you would be highly attracted to Accounts Receivable Factoring. It will enable you to have a greater liquidity to face go about the daily activities of your company. What once was in the hands of your customers, now turns into funds that you can use to pay your bills, your employees and use for investments. Someone that you keep your money and pay for performance is not an option profits.

When considering the benefits of Accounts Receivable Factoring, we suggest you study in detail what Factoring companies have to offer to you, what they ask in exchange and if it is an appealing path for your company to follow. Many companies have enjoyed the benefits of AR Factoring and yours could too.

Factoring is an investment that has a cost. The price tag on factoring services obeys to a series of considerations done by the company. Your business is appealing to them when the benefits are higher than the risks they are taking and the costs it implies. They generally charge you from 65% to 90% of the total amount of your accounts receivables. Any given amount is always the result of conversations with the Factor and agreed upon the basis of the interests of both parties.

When looking at your proposal, the factoring companies will look at the following information:

Financial stability of your clients. The factoring company takes higher risks when the ability of your customers to pay their credit is limited. In short, customers with bad credit require more investment from the Factoring Company to collect.

The dollar amount being factored plays a large roll in the fee for the service.

If your commitment with them is long or not. The longer the better. The factoring company will see positively the fact that you stay with them for longer rather than shorter time and therefore they reward you with attractive interest rates.

Make sure you study the pros and cons of factoring for your company, and when you decide to enjoy the benefits of Accounts Receivable Factoring do not forget to read the small print.

Wade Henderson - Very Professional - 15 yrs in the Business
Finance Field - Gets the deal done. IMMFinancial.com
Accounts Receivable Factoring
Accounts Receivable Financing

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วันอาทิตย์ที่ 7 มีนาคม พ.ศ. 2553

Achieving Cash Flow Management Through Accounts Receivable Factoring


Achieving Cash Flow Management Through Accounts Receivable Factoring
Accounts receivable factoring is another mode of receivables management and working capital funding to eventually increase the cash flow. Accounts receivable factoring involves buying and selling of accounts receivables in order to obtain immediate cash or working capital.



Achieving Cash Flow Management Through Accounts Receivable Factoring
Achieving Cash Flow Management Through Accounts Receivable Factoring

Accounts receivable factoring is another mode of receivables management and working capital funding to eventually increase the cash flow. Accounts receivable factoring involves buying and selling of accounts receivables in order to obtain immediate cash or working capital.

Accounts receivable factoring helps in acquiring cash for the product or the services rendered. It results in immediate cash inflow without creating any debt or transferring the business ownership. Accounts receivables are the most values assets for any company. It is one of the mode for increasing sales and expanding business. The payment is done of the 80% of the invoice value. The 20% of the value is kept as reserved and is paid after deducting the fee once the amount on the invoice is due.

This practice if accounts receivable factoring is most suitable for small and medium business owners. Due to accounts receivable factoring small and medium business owners are able to generate cash and avoid the debt trap. It also helps in representing string financial status and avoids interest on any loans if otherwise taken.

Accounts receivable factoring also results in increased working capital as receivables are conditional on customer's creditworthiness and not the business owners. It helps to avoid loan repayment, transferring business equity, engaging the assets, and also avoid yearly loan review process. For a small business owner accounts receivable factoring represents gaining working capital without overtaking any debt or loan. It is also a mode to increase sales without any repayment tensions for any loans etc. Thus business is able to meet demands and the circle keeps on auto-rotating as accounts receivable factoring increases sales and increased sales asks for more money to complete more orders.

Accounts receivable factoring also provides relief from non-paying clients or slow paying clients. It generates more sales due to increased orders. It also offers flexible funding program to help heighten the sales graph and take vendor discounts due to availability of cash.

This practice of accounts receivable factoring generates cash to fund the payrolls and taxes due. The funds thus generated also help to increase the inventory or buy new equipments, tools, etc to flourish the business.

The availability of cash helps small business owners to negotiate for discounts from their vendors and suppliers. Keep it short book, Czech depositing, monitor collection process, and helps to prepare a report for recovery. Brokers or agencies also provide their services for accounts receivable factoring. They help the business owners to manage their collections, payments, generating more cash and managing their cash inflow process.

Henry Byers, Business Factoring advisor - focusing on Factoring Services and Accounts Receivable Factoring [http://www.factoring-and-invoice-discounting.info]

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วันเสาร์ที่ 6 มีนาคม พ.ศ. 2553

How Factoring Companies Deal With Existing Liens on Accounts Receivable


How Factoring Companies Deal With Existing Liens on Accounts Receivable
When a business owner wishes to engage in an invoice factoring relationship, the factoring company performs due diligence to insure that the potential client is a good fit. One facet of this process is a lien search, which gives the factor adequate assurances that they will have clear title to the client's receivables. This is critical, as the factoring company will be advancing sizable funds to the client.



How Factoring Companies Deal With Existing Liens on Accounts Receivable
How Factoring Companies Deal With Existing Liens on Accounts Receivable

When a business owner wishes to engage in an invoice factoring relationship, the factoring company performs due diligence to insure that the potential client is a good fit. One facet of this process is a lien search, which gives the factor adequate assurances that they will have clear title to the client's receivables. This is critical, as the factoring company will be advancing sizable funds to the client.

The reason that a clear title to all of receivables is important is illustrated by the following example: Suppose that the factor has increased by 80% of the nominal value of bills totaling $ 100,000. The client's customers typically pay within 45 days and payments are made to the factor's lockbox. Between the time the funds are advanced and payments are made by the customers, the factoring client has defaulted on a term loan with a local bank. Among the assets pledged to secure the loan is the company's receivables. In other words, the bank, at the time the loan was granted, made a UCC filing on all the assets used for collateral. This would typically include the receivables, so they have a secured interest in this asset. When the company defaulted on the loan, the bank took control of the assets, which included payments on all the receivables on the books. Had the factoring company not done a lien search that exposed the UCC filed by the bank, they would be greatly exposed and lost the $80,000 advanced to the client.

Another example of a lien filed against receivables is when the company has neglected to pay federal payroll taxes withheld from employee's paychecks and their share of FICA and Medicare taxes. After several notices have been mailed to the company, the IRS will eventually "play hardball" and file a lien against the company's assets. Needless to say, the same type of exposure would exist for the factor.

How invoice factoring companies deal with an existing lien on receivables:

The above scenarios occur all the time, so it's important to those considering the use of accounts receivable factoring to understand that there are ways of dealing with the situation. In the case of a lien filed by the bank, the factor will often analyze the proportionate amount of the receivables to the total collateral base so they can get an idea of what the bank might accept as payment to release the lien on that particular asset. Some banks are stubborn and won't do a partial release, but those that realize that invoice factoring will help the client increase their working capital base will be willing to work out a deal. They will often agree to accept a percentage of the initial advances until the agreed-upon paydown of the loan is made. That lessens their exposure and allows their client to take utilize the advantages that invoice factoring has to offer. In addition, the company has less of a debt load to contend with.

In the case of a lien filed by the IRS for non-payment of payroll taxes, a similar agreement is made. Typically, a subordination agreement. With this legal document, the IRS agrees to allow the funding source to have a senior position on the lien so they will be willing to continue the factoring relationship. In return, the agreement states that a certain amount of the advances will be made to pay off the delinquent payroll taxes.

Whether the lien on receivables is held by a bank, private investor, or the IRS, the lien holder should be flexible and open-minded in working with clients who wish to factor invoices.

Kent Harlan has been a CPA since 1984 and has provided consulting, accounting and financial services to several industries. He is the owner of Ozarks Capital Funding, LLC, a Springfield, MO based company offering financing for business and healthcare providers.

Get a free, no-obligation factoring quote by filling out our online application.

Contact information:
EMAIL: kenth@ocflink.com
PHONE: (417) 849-7394
WEB: http://www.ocflink.com

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วันศุกร์ที่ 5 มีนาคม พ.ศ. 2553

Outsource Your Accounts Receivable Management With Factoring


Outsource Your Accounts Receivable Management With Factoring
One of the biggest business trends of the past 20 to 30 years has been the move toward outsourcing. Companies usually decide to outsource functions that aren't part of their core competencies-or in other words, those that don't lie at the heart of their ability to manufacture a product or deliver a service. One particularly time-consuming task that gobbles up employees' time is the management and collection of accounts receivable (A/R). Companies can outsource these tasks by factoring their receivables and save untold hours of employee time spent on non-core business activities.



Outsource Your Accounts Receivable Management With Factoring
Outsource Your Accounts Receivable Management With Factoring

One of the biggest business trends of the past 20 to 30 years has been the move toward outsourcing. There was a time not so many years ago when most companies handled almost all business functions internally themselves: payroll, hiring, human resources, financials, accounting, IT, etc.

Well, do the names ADP, Paychex, Randstad, or Tatum ring a bell? Each has become a leader in providing specialized business services for companies on an outsourced basis.

Companies usually decide to outsource functions that aren't part of their core competencies-or in other words, those that don't lie at the heart of their ability to manufacture a product or deliver a service. Doing so enables them to focus more of their time, attention and resources on doing things that help differentiate themselves from their competitors and make a real difference for their customers.

It stands to reason that if your company wants to get the most useful productivity out of your employees possible, you should try to ensure that most, if not all, employees are working on tasks related to your core competencies, not on peripheral activities that don't contribute directly to the bottom line.

Gaining Back Hours

One particularly time-consuming task that gobbles up untold hours of many employees' time is the management and collection of accounts receivable (A/R). Few companies would say that this task contributes directly to their ability to create products or deliver services. But there's no denying the importance of A/R management and collections to the success of any company.

You might not realize it, but there's a way to outsource A/R management and collections in the same way that you may be outsourcing your payroll, HR or IT functions. It's called factoring.

With factoring, businesses sell their outstanding receivables to a commercial finance company at a discount. But what many owners don't realize is that when they factor their receivables, the finance company steps in and assists with A/R management and collections, essentially performing all the services of a full-fledged A/R department.

These services include such tasks as backing up documents for accuracy and scanning, follow-up communication on invoices, documenting invoices and payments in a ledgering system, and ongoing evaluation of your customers' credit. The cost of performing these activities can really add up over time. The result for your business is not only immediate cost savings, but also the establishment of a foundation for sound business management practices in the future.

Why Credit and Collections Are Vital

The fact is, many small business owners don't have access to the resources necessary to run and manage a credit and collections department. However, day-to-day credit and collection activities are vitally important to the growth and success of any business.

Commercial finance companies focus primarily on the creditworthiness of your customers, so they will perform direct credit checks on them and utilize expensive, computerized databases that you probably cannot afford to access. They will then analyze these credit reports, uncover bad credit risks and set appropriate credit limits, essentially becoming your full-time credit manager. These thorough, detailed credit checks will minimize serious payment problems and help you build a roster of strong, creditworthy customers over time.

Many commercial finance companies will also maintain detailed, up-to-date accounts receivable records that are web-accessible and searchable. The benefits are extensive: accurate noting of aging accounts, reliable tracking of payment information and addresses, accessible data for follow-up tasks, and development of sound business fundamentals.

Focus On Your Core Competencies

The bottom line is that outsourcing A / R management and collections to a commercial finance company will free you to spend more time focusing on your core capabilities: product creation, marketing and management. Because every hour you spend performing tasks that do not relate to increased sales or production is costing you real dollars.

With the stress of short-term cash flow and financial obstacles removed, you can focus on your primary business and not waste time trying to be an accountant, credit manager or collector. The result will be a stronger company that can thrive and manage rapid growth.

Tracy Eden is the National Marketing Director for Commercial Finance Group (CFG), which has offices throughout the U.S. CFG provides creative financing solutions to small and medium-sized businesses that may not qualify for traditional financing. Further information on the company and their services offered can be found at http://www.CFGroup.net Tracy's direct email is tdeden@cfgroup.net.

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วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 4 มีนาคม พ.ศ. 2553

Your Cash Flow Slowed, Accounts Receivable Factoring Can Help


Your Cash Flow Slowed, Accounts Receivable Factoring Can Help
In the most recent issue of Fortune Small Business there is a great article by Jay Gotz. In Jay's article "Surviving the Recession" he summarizes through downturns in the market you can afford decreased profits if you have cash flow, however the converse is not true. I could not agree more, cash flow is the life blood to any company. Without proper cash flow the business will not function properly and in many cases the ownership and management will pull away from their long terms success strategies to solve short term cash flow issues.



Your Cash Flow Slowed, Accounts Receivable Factoring Can Help
Your Cash Flow Slowed, Accounts Receivable Factoring Can Help

In the most recent issue of Fortune Small Business there is a great article by Jay Gotz. In Jay's article "Surviving the Recession" he summarizes through downturns in the market you can afford decreased profits if you have cash flow, however the converse is not true. I could not agree more, cash flow is the life blood to any company. Without proper cash flow the business will not function properly and in many cases the ownership and management will pull away from their long terms success strategies to solve short term cash flow issues.

According to a survey by Fortune and Zogby International of business owners in early December they found, 55% of small business owners say it has become harder to collect receivables in the past six weeks. Of those who say it's gotten harder, 60% describe this as a serious problem. Spending much time in the private sector, prior to founding Troon Funding Services. I can confirm this is a serious problem, because as accounts receivables grow, cash flow tightens.

Accounts Receivable Factoring will allow your company to convert those accounts receivables to cash. As I stated in a previous article cash is king, especially in this economic environment. This additional working capital can be used to take advantage of payment discounts offered by your vendors, look for new opportunities in the market place due to your competitors inability to ship timely, and/or to pay down existing expenses. In all cases with factoring, your business will be in a better cash position.

Is Accounts Receivable Factoring right for You...

Accounts receivable factoring can actually be a very smart move in the game of business if played correctly. To make some quick money, a business owner will sell their receivables at a discounted price to us for cash. In turn, we will turn take full responsibility of the account. Unlike a bank that charges interest on the businesses loan balance, Troon Funding will charge a small discount fee that is paid after your customer submits payment. Again, this method of financing is not a loan and is most beneficial to businesses looking for immediate cash flow, specifically for invoices less than 90 days old.

If you want to explore the possibilities, please contact us at 480-239-9879 or go to our website, Troon financing services for more information on accounts receivable factoring and other products and services that we offer.

Author : Darren Grady - www.workingcapitalforgrowth.net

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account receivable factoring


Accounts Receivable Factoring - A Viable Cash-flow Solution for Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises


Accounts Receivable Factoring - A  Viable Cash-flow Solution for Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises
Accounts receivable factoring or a bank loan. Find out which type of financing is best for your small to medium sized enterprise.



Accounts Receivable Factoring - A  Viable Cash-flow Solution for Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises
Accounts Receivable Factoring - A Viable Cash-flow Solution for Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises

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. Factoring to help you remain responsible for non-payment from your customers and with no assistance, the risk factors considered and reached a high 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.

David Springer is a consultant for Sovereign Funding Group. Sovereign Funding Group is an experienced, reputable company that offers convenient, no-risk services to help you with the selling of your deferred payments and business financing including accounts receivable factoring.

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http://www.sovereignfunding.com/

account receivable factoring