A/R Funding is an excellent
source of capital for businesses that are growing or experiencing
a temporary cash flow squeeze.
Accounts Receivable Funding also known as factoring is the
sale of invoices at a discount. A method of financing that
is used by businesses to raise capital quickly and improve
cash flow without going into debt.
How Does it Work?
Precisely, when a business sells a product or service to
a customer, it creates an invoice. Typically, an invoice would
itemize the unit sold, the price, and the terms of the sale.
The invoice can either serve as a receipt if it acknowledges
that payment has been received, or as a bill if payment is
due. An outstanding invoice may also be called an account
receivable. Instead of waiting to collect payment, a business
may elect to sell the invoice to a factor and receive immediate
cash advance. A factor is an individual or business that is
engaged in the buying of accounts receivable.
For the privilege of receiving immediate access to money
and early payment, you will be charged a nominal factoring
fee by Factor. Your customer will be notified of where to
send payment. The fee for the factored invoice will be deducted
after payment is received from your customer. You do not have
to factor all your invoices or change your billing process
except for the payment address, and in some cases, Factor
will have to submit the original invoices to your customer.
Factoring fills the money gap and creates a predictable and
dependable source of cash. Instead of waiting on payments
from your customers for uncertain number of days, weeks, and
sometimes months, funds can be made available immediately
by Factor each time you invoice. You would now have available
cash to meet payroll, pay rent, buy supplies, and meet other
operational needs.
The Factor will wait to collect from your customer. When
the invoice is paid, Factor will retain a sum equal to initial
cash advance plus applicable fees. The balance is then refunded
to you along with account statements. The exact factoring
fee will depend on volume and time of payment.
With factoring, a business owner might be able to completely
avoid loans and other financing options that could restrict
independence and the ability to operate freely and efficiently.
Until recent decades, factoring was only available to large
corporations that are able to meet the minimum threshold required
by major Factors, many of which were wholly-owned by or subsidiaries
of banks. Today, factoring is available to small and medium-sized
businesses because factors and brokers that are more diverse,
and requiring no minimums or maximums has entered the field.
To begin a factoring relationship, you will submit an application
along with documents to support your business registration,
ownership, and possibly sales volume. Afterwards, you will
sign an agreement that may include UCC filing statements,
IRS information release forms, and other documents. In most
cases, no term commitment is required and your credit limit
will be directly related to sales. The process can take anywhere
from 3 - 10 days to establish an account. After which, funding
is often immediate, usually within 24 - 48 hours of submitting
an invoice. It does not particularly matter in what State
you are located.
Factoring has evolved into a very fine financing technique
for companies that are experiencing rapid growth or have other
cash flow needs but may not qualify or want conventional funding.
There are countless reasons why businesses factor. For example:
you may need a continuous level of cash to give you the ability
to operate in a timely and efficient manner; you may want
an unlimited credit line that is directly related to sales;
you may want an alternative to borrowing without encumbering
valuable assets; you may want to extend terms to your customers
to make it easy for them to pay and encourage them to buy
more; you may want immediate access to your money rather than
waiting on your customers to pay and so on. Click
here to request a FREE copy of a complete report
on why businesses factor.
A perfect credit is not required to establish a factoring
account. The single most important requirement to qualify
for factoring is that you must be a registered business and
have accounts receivable due by credit-worthy customers. It
is the Factor's responsibility to verify your customer's credit
worthiness. You can qualify whether you are a start-up or
an already established and profitable business with credit
problems and even if you already have a loan or line of credit.
Because factoring sources are very diverse, several approaches
may be used. However, there are two major types of factoring
- Recourse and non-recourse. Recourse factoring requires a
personal re-purchase guarantee by the seller, who is ultimately
responsible for unpaid, disputed, and fraudulent invoices.
With non-recourse factoring, the Factor assumes total risks
provided the invoice is not disputed. Regardless of what type
of factoring, all agreement requires principal's guarantee
against committing fraud.
Operationally, there is also factoring with notification
and non-notification. Factoring with notification is where
a seller's customer is notified by the factor and verifies
the invoice. With non-notification factoring, the seller's
customer is not notified and may not be aware of the factoring
relationship.
After the agreement is signed, a UCC-1 lien against all accounts
receivable is filed. It is a blanket lien, and it is similar
to a lien on a house, which is against the entire home and
not just parts of it. Accounts receivable is simply looked
at as one of the assets of a business.
Generally, most factors will gladly provide references and
testimonials from satisfied clients. However, they do so sparingly
only to serious prospects and with the consent of their clients,
so as not to violate confidentiality agreement.
The following are some of the prevailing misconceptions about
factoring:
Misconception #1:
Factoring is only suitable for large corporations or businesses
that are in extremely bad financial condition.
Fact:
Although, it is true that factoring used to be the exclusive
domain of corporate giants. The fact is, by share numbers
alone, more small businesses than big corporations are factoring
today. Almost any business can receive funding through factoring
and the rates are very competitive. Factoring is also not
just for companies experiencing cash shortages. Most astute
business managers use it in long-term planning and in conjunction
with other revenue generation methods. It is increasingly
becoming part of businesses overall Financial Plans.
Misconception #2:
Customers may hold a negative view of your company if you
factor, and may seek alternative vendors.
Fact:
Being able to qualify for outside funding should speak bundles
to your confidence and the confidence financiers have in your
company and your customers. Business owners more than anyone
understands the difficulty nowadays in securing outside funding.
To have access to funds when you need it should put your customers
at ease because you will be better equipped to meet their
needs at any time even on short notice. Therefore, they would
prefer to continue working with you rather than seek another
vendor to start a new relationship with. Moreover, approval
to factor is usually based more on the credit-worthiness of
your customers than your personal credit.
Misconception #3:
Factors offend and alienate customers with collection calls.
Fact:
A factor's goal is to enable you to do increasing and continuing
business. Therefore, it is in a factor's interest to help
you succeed. It's folly to think that factors would intetionally
offend and harass your customers with collection calls. The
other facts are that without direct pressure factors more
often improve and enhance the collection process to the amazement
of clients. This is so because most businesses realize that
their ability to secure more accounts can be directly related
to their credit reports and references. The report factors
may provide to Commercial Credit Bureaus may impact the ability
of your customers to do business. Therefore, in order to have
and maintain good credit rating, they will pay on time.
Yes, I would not deny the fact that factors do and sometimes
call customers, but only as a reminder, rather than to
harass
a customer. Factors are more likely to successfully resolve
payment issues in ways that would satisfy the client
than
the client would on their own.
Misconception #4:
Factoring is prohibitively expensive and would absorb all
profit margins and put you out of business.
Fact:
Last but not least, that factoring is too expensive is often
a generalized response given when a prospect does not yet
have complete details. The cost of factoring is relatively
favored compared with other financing. It can vary greatly
and depend on many conditions, not unlike bank loans.
Factoring is simply another form of financing that businesses
have. Factor's funding should not be weighed against a bank
loan because funds received through factoring is not considered
a loan legally or in practice. The fee is not considered as
interest, it is a purchase discount.
Attempting to multiply and annualize the discount rate may
be well intentioned, but it is misleading.
If you borrow $100,000 from a bank at 12%, you could make
monthly payments of $1,000 and in 12 months would have paid
$12,000. Yet, you would still owe $100,000. If you factored
$100,000 each month at 5% discount, in 12 months your fees
would be $60,000. However, you would have received $1,200,000
(12 x 100,000) and the fees would still be $60,000.
What factoring does is like converting your invoice terms
to COD (cash-on-delivery). For being able to receive substantial
upfront payment, you allow a discount. The real bottom line
is that with better cash flow you can grow your business rapidly
and exponentially. In theory, your profit should increase,
not decrease. For example, take the case of a T-Shirt design
and distribution company that does about $8,350 in sales monthly
or $100,200.00 a year without the benefit of factored revenue.
However, with cash advance to buy supplies and meet expenses,
revenue could possibly double. Look:
Without Factoring
With Factoring
Sales Revenue
$100,200
$200,400
60,120
120,240
40,080
80,160
36,072 (36%)
48,096 (24%)
0
5,010 (5% of $100,200)
4,008 (4%)
27,054 (13.5%)
Cost of Goods (60%)
Gross Profit
Overhead
Cost of Factoring
Net Profit
Even with increased expenses and cost of factoring as a result
of additional volume, you would get a much higher percent
of profit overall. Net profit increased from $4,008 or 4%
to $27,054 or 13.5%. This is still a significant increase.
The core question is, can you do more business with better
cash flow? Fixed cost and overhead would not necessarily
increase in proportion to sales. You may increase staff, but
because your sales double does not mean you have to double
overhead such as -- office space, utilities, or labor.
Most businesses would prosper with better cash flow. However,
it takes more than just money to run a successful business.
It would be irresponsible of us to make claims of how profitable
you will be. How much profit you can make would depend on
a number of factors. It would require knowledge of your business,
your skills, abilities, and so on, which is out of our control.
Numbers used here are for illustration purposes only. We make
no guarantees that you will achieve the same results.
Now that you have complete information about factoring, we
hope that you are better equipped to make an informed decision.
However, we are not engaged in rendering legal, accounting,
or other professional service. If legal advice or other expert
assistance is required, you should seek the services of a
competent professional person.
If you have already decided to establish your funding account,
go to our application
to sign up for your very own factoring account. If you have
further questions, you should contact
us.
We welcome questions and are always pleased to address them.
Through the years, we have gathered questions that are frequently
asked and answered them above. In addition, misconceptions
that merit response have been addressed as well. Please bear
in mind that these are generalized responses. The methods
of operations and specific processes may vary from factor
to factor.