How to Use Receivables Factoring to Improve Your Cash Flow

Dec 30
11:46

2009

Marco Terry

Marco Terry

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Does your business have cash flow issues? Read this article to learn if receivables factoring is the right solution.

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There is nothing more frustrating to a business owner that having to turn away sales because they lack the cash flow to support them. For companies that sell products,How to Use Receivables Factoring to Improve Your Cash Flow Articles this means not being able to replenish inventory in time to capitalize new opportunities. For companies in the service industry, this means not being able to pay the additional employees (or hours) to cover additional service requests. This problem is fairly common, especially for small and midsize businesses. There are many things that can cause cash flow problems. The most common problem is a simple one: timing. The timing of the revenues does not match the timing of expenses. For many companies, expenses come before revenues. For example, a product supplier buys inventory (an expense), sells it on net 30 terms and then collects revenues 30 days later. Likewise, a staffing agency can place employees, who must be paid weekly but then bills the client on net 30 terms. Again, they wait 30 days before being able to collect the revenue. Unless the company has a capital reserve to operate the company and grow while waiting to be paid, it will run into problems. The solution to this problem is fairly simple. The right business financing solution can fix it. The problem is that getting a business loan can be very difficult for small companies. They require substantial documentation and collateral. And many times, they can take a long time to close as the institutions credit committees review the cases. There is an alternative solution that can work better than asmall business loan – especially if your challenge is that you cannot wait 30 to 60 days to get paid by clients. It’s called factoring financing. Factoringis a very different than conventional business loans. With factoring, you get an advance for your outstanding invoices. This is the equivalent of a quick pay. This helps correct the timing problem between expenses and revenues and provides your business with the cash flow to support existing operations and new sales. Most factoring companies don’t lend money, rather they buy the financial rights to your invoices. Their most important consideration is your clients’ ability to pay the invoice in a timely fashion. This makes invoice factoring accessible to companies who don’t have substantial assets but do have great clients. However, the credit quality of your invoices is not the only qualifying consideration of a factoring company. Your business must also be free of judgments, lawsuits and liens. Factoring transactions tend to be structured as a sale with two installment payments. The first installment is usually 80% of the invoice value and is given to you as soon as the invoice is sold to the factoring company. The second installment, usually 20% less the financing fee, is given as soon as your client pays for the invoice. Small business factoring integrates quickly into most organizations and it has a very specific scope: it is designed to solve the cash flow constrains generated the timing discrepancy between expenses and revenues.

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