Factoring. Cash Without
Borrowing |
By Fred Coutts |
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How to Increase Cash Flow Without Borrowing
Cash flow is one
of the main reasons businesses fail. At one time or another,
every business, even successful ones, have experienced poor cash
flow. Cash flow does not have to be a problem any more. Do not
be fooled -- banks are not the only places you can get funding.
Other solutions are available and you do not have to borrow.
What is Factoring?
One solution is called factoring.
Factoring is the process of selling accounts receivable to an
investor rather than waiting to collect the money from the
customer.
Oh, the Irony Factoring has an ironic
distinction: It is the financial backbone of many of America's
most successful businesses. Why is this ironic? Because
factoring is not taught in business colleges, is seldom
mentioned in business plans and is relatively unknown to the
majority of American business people. Yet it is a financial
process that frees up billions of dollars every year, enabling
thousands of businesses to grow and prosper.
Factoring
has been around for thousands of years. Factors are investors
who pay cash for the right to receive the future payments on
your invoices.
An unpaid receivable or invoice has value.
It is a debt your customer has agreed to pay in the near future.
Factoring Principals
Although factoring deals exclusively
with business-to-business transactions, a large percentage of
the retail business uses a factoring principal. MasterCard,
Visa, and American Express all use a form of factoring in their
retail transactions. Using the purest definition of the word,
these large consumer finance companies are really just large
factors of consumer paper.
Think about it: You make a
purchase at Sears and charge it to your MasterCard. The store
gets paid almost immediately, even though you do not make
payment until you are ready. For this service, the credit card
company charges Sears a fee (typical fees range from two to four
percent of the sale).
The Benefits
Factoring can
offer many benefits to cash-hungry companies. Rather than wait
30, 60, 90 days or longer for payment on a product or service
that has already been delivered, a business can factor (sell)
its receivables for cash at a small discount off the amount of
the invoice.
Payroll, marketing efforts, and working
capital are just a few of the business needs that can be met
with this instant cash.
Factoring provides the means for
a manufacturer to replenish inventory and make more products to
sell: There is no longer a need to wait for earlier sales to be
paid. Factoring is not just a cash management tool for
manufacturers: Almost any type of business can benefit from
factoring.
Generally, a business that extends credit will
have 10 to 20 percent of its annual sales tied up in accounts
receivable at any given time. Think for a moment about how much
money is tied up in 60 days' worth of invoices: You cannot pay
the power bill or this week's payroll with a customer's invoice,
but you can sell that invoice for the cash to meet those
obligations.
Factoring is a fast and easy process. The
factor buys the invoice at a discount, usually a few percentage
points less than the face value of the invoice.
The
Drawbacks
People consider the discount a small cost of
doing business. A four-percent discount for a 30-day invoice is
common. Compared with the problem of not having cash when you
need it to operate, the four-percent discount is negligible.
Look at the factor's discount as though your business had
offered the customer a discount for paying cash. It works out
the same.
Companies consider the discount the same way
they treat a sales price: It is simply the cost of generating
cash flow, much like discounting merchandise is the cost of
generating sales.
Factoring is a cash flow tool used by a
variety of businesses, not just those who are small or
struggling. Many companies factor to reduce the overhead of
their own accounting department. Others use factoring to
generate cash, which can be used to expand marketing efforts and
increase production.
Why Factoring Appeals to the
Start-Up
Factoring is especially appealing to young and
rapidly growing companies. Since the process shortens their
business cycle, these businesses can grow faster. The ability to
make more products to sell while waiting for invoices to be paid
is largely eliminated. Such businesses usually net much more
profit with factoring than without, even when the discount is
considered.
Factoring vs. Bank Loans
So, why not
simply go over to the friendly banker for a loan to alleviate
cash flow problems? A loan can be difficult if not impossible to
receive, especially for a young, high-growth operation, because
bankers are not expected to decrease lending restrictions soon.
The relationships between businesses and their bankers are not
as strong or as dependable as they used to be.
The impact
of a loan is much different than that of the factoring process
on a business. A loan places a debt on your business balance
sheet, which costs you interest. By contrast, factoring puts
money in the bank without the creation of any obligation.
Frequently, the factoring discount will be less than the current
loan interest rate.
Loans are largely dependent on the
borrower's financial soundness, whereas factoring is more
interested in the soundness of the client's customers and not
the client's business itself. This is a real plus for new
businesses without established track records.
There are
many situations where factoring can help a business meet its
cash flow needs. It provides a continuing source of operating
capital without incurring debt, which can result in growth
opportunities that dramatically increase the bottom line.
Virtually any business can benefit from factoring as part of its
overall operating philosophy.
Every good businessperson
must understand the concept and benefits of factoring in order
to operate as profitably as possible. The following chart can
help you understand the differences between factoring and other
sources of funding.
For more information on factoring and
other non-traditional ways to obtain funding, contact Fred
Coutts at (206) 364-9613 or Fred@FredCoutts.com. Please visit my
website at http://www.fredcoutts.com/index3.htm for more
information on powerful funding programs without going through a
bank
Fred Coutts, CPA, CMA. All Rights Reserved. |
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