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Ensuring you get paid for exports

Experts agree that the ques­tion of pay­ments has nev­er been more cru­cial. They say busi­ness­es must go to greater lengths to under­stand inter­na­tion­al trans­ac­tions and the rep­u­ta­tion of the firm with which they are doing busi­ness.

Roman Itskovich, vice pres­i­dent of Finan­cial Prod­ucts at Ebury, explains that there are a num­ber of ques­tions cor­po­rates should ask before agree­ing pay­ment terms.

He says: “Is the firm they are work­ing with mak­ing a one-off pay­ment? Is the for­eign firm rep­utable? Does it have non-pay­ment his­to­ry? Is there a con­trac­tu­al option for non-pay­ment because of sub-stan­dard prod­uct qual­i­ty, or an opt-out clause?

“If a busi­ness is par­tic­u­lar­ly con­cerned about a par­tic­u­lar pay­ment, then a pay­ment mech­a­nism, such as let­ters of cred­it or guar­an­tees, can be used to ensure the pay­ment is made.”

Let­ters of cred­it or guar­an­tees usu­al­ly involve a third par­ty, typ­i­cal­ly a bank, guar­an­tee­ing the pay­ment upon dis­cussed con­di­tions, great­ly reduc­ing the risk of non-pay­ment.

How­ev­er, if a busi­ness is com­fort­able tak­ing pay­ment from anoth­er organ­i­sa­tion, then efforts should be made to ensure a pay­ment is com­plet­ed in the quick­est time pos­si­ble.

Mr Itskovich explains: “They should make sure the buy­er is incen­tivised to pri­ori­tise mak­ing the pay­ment, ensur­ing the rela­tion­ship is strong and the buy­er under­stands a prompt pay­ment can lead to ben­e­fits, such as a dis­count or a faster turn­around time.”

The Chi­nese ren­min­bi has scope to be one of the key cur­ren­cy influ­ences over com­ing years

Being paid on time

Risks aris­ing from slow pay­ments, such as cur­ren­cy risk, have been under­lined more recent­ly with glob­al mar­kets react­ing to macro-eco­nom­ic news.

Claire Ben­ni­son, region­al direc­tor at Brooks Mac­don­ald Asset Man­age­ment, says: “For UK com­pa­nies, the key export mar­ket is typ­i­cal­ly close to our shores, name­ly Europe, so the lev­el of the euro to the pound is a key cur­ren­cy rate. Any spec­u­la­tion, par­tic­u­lar­ly post the ini­tial Greek cri­sis, that the euro­zone could fall apart will be a major event and is a risk that many com­pa­nies have to con­sid­er.

“That said, many of the larg­er glob­al com­pa­nies are both oper­a­tional­ly and end-user geared to Chi­na. Many input costs and much pro­duc­tion is under­tak­en in Chi­na, yet this is also becom­ing one of the main mar­kets for fin­ished goods and ser­vices too. There­fore, the Chi­nese ren­min­bi has scope to be one of the key cur­ren­cy influ­ences over com­ing years.”

Ms Ben­ni­son high­lights the recent volatil­i­ty from Chi­na as a rea­son that firms need to take steps to ensure prompt pay­ment.

“The recent action by the Chi­nese to allow the ren­min­bi to deval­ue against the dol­lar sur­prised mar­kets, result­ing in the biggest two-day fall in val­ue since 1994, and has increased the chances of a cur­ren­cy war and an increase in volatil­i­ty,” she says. “Fur­ther deval­u­a­tion could also add con­cerns to busi­ness­es look­ing to hedge or mit­i­gate Chi­nese cur­ren­cy risk.”

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