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Stepping into the funding gap

When a com­pa­ny receives an order from its end-cus­tomer, ful­fill­ing the order is not always as sim­ple as ship­ping goods to the cus­tomer and receiv­ing pay­ment. In many cas­es, an ini­tial out­lay is required in order to pur­chase the goods from their own sup­pli­ers. As a result, it is not unusu­al for small and medi­um-sized enter­pris­es (SMEs) to find them­selves in the posi­tion of being unable to fund their cus­tomers’ orders.

This is par­tic­u­lar­ly the case when SMEs are import­ing or export­ing goods. For exam­ple, the SME may have to pay a deposit upfront to its sup­pli­ers to secure the goods and then pay the remain­der upon receipt before ship­ping the goods back to the UK. The SME then deliv­ers the prod­uct to the end-cus­tomer and only then does it sub­mit its invoice, which may not pay the bill until 45 or 60 days lat­er.

SMEs in this sit­u­a­tion face a sig­nif­i­cant fund­ing gap. With­out fund­ing, SMEs may not be able to ful­fil their orders, but in many cas­es banks are unwill­ing to finance them. In response to these chal­lenges, com­pa­nies are turn­ing to oth­er sources of finance.

Trade Finance Part­ners (TFP) is a spe­cial­ist trade finance com­pa­ny which was set up in 2011 along the lines of an old-fash­ioned mer­chant bank­ing mod­el. Last year the com­pa­ny secured a £25-mil­lion three-year trade finance facil­i­ty from Mac­quar­ie Bank. In addi­tion to pro­vid­ing finance to SMEs, TFP offers a com­pre­hen­sive ser­vice, includ­ing struc­tur­ing trans­ac­tions, arrang­ing ship­ping and logis­tics, and pay­ing VAT and import duties.

“Our approach is to pur­chase goods from the SME’s sup­pli­ers and to take own­er­ship of the goods,” explains William Teb­bit, the company’s com­mer­cial direc­tor and one of its found­ing share­hold­ers. “Once the goods are on the water, we sell them to our SME client with reten­tion of title, on terms which broad­ly match the end-customer’s pay­ment terms. When our client invoic­es the end-cus­tomer, the receiv­able is assigned to us – and once the end cus­tomer pays us, we pay the prof­it to our client.”

Under this mod­el, TFP assumes the risk that the end-cus­tomer will not buy the prod­uct, at least until the receiv­able has been cre­at­ed and cred­it insur­ance can be pur­chased. “We take true risk by phys­i­cal­ly buy­ing the goods – yes, there is a pur­chase order, but there is no receiv­able cre­at­ed at that point,” says Mr Teb­bit. “Our clients like this mod­el because they can see us tak­ing risk.”

Unlike banks, TFP pur­chas­es goods rather than lend­ing mon­ey and is not inter­est­ed in eval­u­at­ing its clients’ bal­ance sheets. As a result, TFP is will­ing to part­ner with com­pa­nies which are look­ing to ful­fil their very first order, as well as those with an exist­ing mul­ti-mil­lion-pound turnover.

How do the end-cus­tomers feel about this type of arrange­ment? “Usu­al­ly end-cus­tomers like the fact that TFP is involved because it gives them one less thing to wor­ry about,” says Mr Teb­bit. “With­out finance, the end-cus­tomer may be con­cerned that the goods may not end up on their shelves, par­tic­u­lar­ly when sup­pli­ers are strug­gling with 90-day pay­ment terms. Some clients take us with them when they pitch for new busi­ness and explain that we are fund­ing their sup­ply chains to give the cus­tomer the cer­tain­ty that, if they place an order, they will receive the goods.”

Giv­en that bank lend­ing to SMEs has reduced by 40 per cent since 2008, it should come as no sur­prise that TFP’s approach is prov­ing suc­cess­ful. The com­pa­ny report­ed rev­enues of more than £12 mil­lion in 2011, its first year of oper­a­tion, and is on track to reach £45 mil­lion in the cur­rent year.