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WHAT IS ASSET BASED FINANCING?
An asset-based loan is secured by a company's accounts receivable,
inventory, equipment, and/or real estate, whereby the lender takes
a first priority security interest in those assets financed. Asset-based
loans are an alternative to traditional bank lending because they
serve borrowers with risk characteristics typically outside a bank's
comfort level.
Asset-based financial services organizations (asset-based
lenders) play a vital part in financing the economy and are dedicated
to the growth and well-being of their clients. They provide their
clients with cash by lending on fixed assets, accounts receivable
and inventory, and engage in factoring, purchase order financing,
real estate financing and leasing. They include the asset-based
lending arms of domestic and foreign commercial banks, small and
large independent finance companies, floor plan financing organizations,
factoring organizations and financing subsidiaries of major industrial
corporations.
Expert in all facets of collateralized lending,
asset-based lenders – large and small alike – possess the experience
and know-how to structure the proper financing program for their
borrowers. They specialize in financing businesses and business
transactions involving a broad range of products and services, both
domestically and internationally. They provide:
Operating cash Funding for an acquisition,
a merger or a leveraged buyout
Debt consolidation
Turnaround financing
Bankruptcy/reorganization financing
Equipment financing
Inventory financing
Floor plan financing
Equipment leasing Import/export trade financing
Growth financing
Factoring services
Growth Money
Businesses need money to grow. A business cannot survive just because
it has a better product, an exclusive market or the best method
of distribution. The catalyst required for progress is money.
Business owners and managers must be knowledgeable
about financing, what it can do, why one form may be better than
another. It can be used when:
Operating cash is tied up in receivables
The best trade terms for supplies create cash flow shortages
Inventory levels are high because of client demands
Sales growth is straining resources
Seasonality peaks cause problems No fixed assets are available for
collateral
Trade discounts and special pricing terms cannot be obtained
Letters of credit are required to supply or buy overseas
Debtor-in-possession financing is required
Asset-based lenders often advance funds when traditional
sources are not available. They are familiar with various types
of businesses and are responsive to client needs.
Loan size
Asset-based lenders fund businesses with annual sales less than
$250,000 to more than $1 billion. Credit depends on the type of
business and the content and quality of the collateral. Frequently,
the credit granted is more than the net worth of the business.
The increased cash availability provided by asset-based
lenders often makes the difference between profitable growth and
failure for the undercapitalized business. The phrases "too small,"
"too new," and "not enough net worth," do not deter an asset-based
funding source. The flexibility and cash availability provided by
asset-based financing have enabled countless companies to grow and
take advantage of market opportunities.
Cost
The cost of asset-based loans is influenced by the credit risk and
collateral associated with the transaction. When evaluating an asset-based
loan, borrowers should assess the cost of financing in the context
of the benefits to be received. Compared with other financing alternatives,
asset-based lending is very cost effective and efficient.
Asset-based lenders frequently look beyond financial
statements to determine how much money they are prepared to advance
at and after closing. Therefore, borrowers can take advantage of
profit opportunities in the market by being able to plan ahead based
upon their cash availability. Asset-based lenders are proactive
rather than reactive and can often restructure debt during tough
times to help avoid costly and disruptive refinancing. Over the
long haul, the benefits will tend to offset the premiums associated
with borrowing from the asset-based financial services industry.
Types of Asset-Based Financing
Secured lending
The lender provides funds secured by the assets of the borrower.
The collateral can include: accounts receivable, inventory, machinery,
real estate, patents, trademarks or other assets where value can
be determined. The secured lender may establish a revolving loan
where the borrower provides a pool of collateral that the lender
translates into operating cash or working capital. The borrower
uses the financing to buy more materials, expand marketing, improve
productivity or other improvements and sells the resultant product.
The sales create receivables that are pledged for cash advances
and the payments received on the invoices pay down the loan. These
increases and reductions in the loan balance are cyclical, hence
the revolving nature of the loan. Some receivables have less collateral
value, for example, progress billing, past due receivables, and
receivables subject to "set-off". Raw materials and finished goods
are normally acceptable collateral, but work-in-progress generally
is not. Equipment and real estate may also be used as a source of
financing.
Non-recourse factoring:
The financing institution buys the receivable and assumes the risk
of customer credit. The factor guarantees against credit loss, unlike
a secured lending facility. The factor will also check credit, undertake
collection and manage bookkeeping functions.
Full-recourse financing:
The financing institution accepts assignment of the receivable but
does not assume the credit risk. The client retains responsibility
for managing the receivable portfolio. Generally, the lender will
finance invoices up to ninety days from delivery of goods or services,
then charge them back to the client.
Discount factoring: The
factor purchases the receivables at a discount to compensate for
paying prior to the due date.
Maturity factoring: The factor purchases the receivables,
assumes the credit risk and advances cash to the client as the invoices
mature.
Non-notification factoring:
Account debtors are not notified of the sale of the receivables
and the invoices are either paid to a lock-box or to the shipper.
This is similar to a receivable loan.
Notification factoring:
Account debtors are notified of the purchase of the receivables
and are directed to make payments to the factor.
Spot factoring: A "one
shot" transaction, generally out of the normal course of business.
Floor plan financing:
Certain industries require significant high-priced finished goods
inventory. Examples: automobiles, refrigerators, washing machines,
televisions and stereo systems. These are supplied on extended credit
terms to retailers. Retailers usually do not purchase this expensive
inventory outright; rather a finance company will provide credit
to purchase the inventory, secured by the product "on the floor".
Leasing: The lessor
purchases the equipment needed to fulfill certain obligations and
the equipment remains the property of the lessor even after all
the borrowed funds are repaid; or existing assets are sold to and
leased from a leasing company to release capital needed for working
capital purposes.
Purchase order financing:
Working capital financing is secured by a security interest in existing
purchase orders and the proceeds of the purchase orders. Normally
the security interest is perfected by the lender taking possession
of the inventory or raw materials.
Real estate financing:
the mortgaging of land and/or buildings to raise working capital.
More about factoring
The origin of the factoring industry has been traced to the days
of the Roman Empire or even earlier, but the industry as we know
it today in the United States goes back only about 200 years to
the early nineteenth century.
Factors evolved from U.S. selling agents for European
textile mills. The European mills used the agents to sell their
fabrics in the U.S. and paid the agents a commission on sales. The
agents also warehoused merchandise and did the shipping for their
European clients. As these selling agents prospered and became more
familiar with their own customers, they began taking on the job
of establishing credit terms and advancing funds to the European
mills. The oldest documented factoring firm traced its roots to
1810 and several others were established in the first half of the
nineteenth century.
Traditional or old-line factoring is fairly straightforward
and is designed for long-term relationships. It involves the purchase
of receivables without recourse and with notification to the client's
customer. The factor buys the receivables created by a client's
sales and then collects the proceeds directly from the client's
customer. After the factor buys a receivable, it assumes the credit
risk on that receivable. If the client's customer doesn't pay because
of a credit problem, the factor must assume the loss.
Essentially, an old-line factor offers its clients
credit protection, collection, bookkeeping services and financing.
In addition to advances against receivables purchased, once a relationship
is established, factors often provide clients with over-advances
during peak shipping seasons. Factors also offer financing services
and accommodations such as inventory loans, letters of credit/import
financing and equipment financing. Export financing is also available
through alliances with international factoring networks. Principally
because credit guarantees are important in textiles and apparel
and because of factoring's roots in the textile industry, about
70 percent of the volume of old-line factors is still in textiles,
apparel and related industries.
Since the factor takes the credit risk on the sale,
it must first approve the sale through its credit department. Thus,
the client is relieved of the cost of running a credit department.
Because of the credit guarantee, old-line factoring is limited to
industries in which credit information is available. The charge
for the credit and collection service, called the factoring commission,
varies with the sales volume of the client, the size of the transactions
and competitive conditions.
The economic rationale for the factoring service
is fairly obvious. With thousands of suppliers selling to the same
customer, without factoring, each seller would have to do its own
credit appraisals and collections. This involves an incredible duplication
of effort. With factoring, a single credit department operating
for hundreds or thousands of suppliers, eliminates much of the duplication
and promotes efficiency. And with the aid of electronic data processing,
the cost of the credit and collection operation has been reduced
exponentially and the savings are passed on to the client. Technology
has revolutionized the industry, eliminating tons of paperwork and
providing clients with valuable on-line information. The system
can generate a host of reports on sales analysis and other information
to help a client analyze its own business.
It should be noted that the factor's guarantee,
is a credit guarantee and does not apply to anything other than
the financial inability of the client's customer to pay. The guarantee
does not apply to merchandise disputes between the buyer and the
seller. If the receivable is not paid because of buyer claims of
defective merchandise or untimely delivery or any other dispute
involving the merchandise or its delivery, the factor will look
to the client (the seller) for reimbursement.
The credit and collection service is just half of
the business of the old line factor. The other half, and for many
clients, the more important half, involves advances of funds against
the purchased receivables. If the customer wants a cash advance,
it can borrow from the factor. The interest on the loan is in addition
to the commission and is usually at a rate competitive with the
cost of a comparable bank loan.
Many factoring clients are maturity or non-borrowing
clients. They wait until the purchased receivables are paid and
then may collect the proceeds from the factor. If the client leaves
the funds with the factor after collection, the factor will pay
interest on the balances at a rate comparable with the factors'
cost of funds. These balances may be drawn upon when needed.
Traditionally, factoring was done on a notification
basis. The client's customer is notified that the account has been
turned over to a factor and the customer's payment should be made
directly to the factor. However, a non-notification agreement can
be worked out. The factor would still purchase the receivables outright
after doing the normal credit check of the customer, but the customer
wouldn't be notified that its account has been sold. If the client
borrows money, customer payments in non-notification accounts are
usually sent to lock-boxes which the factor administers.
Aside from old-line factoring, there are as many
variations on factoring as there are entrepreneurs who choose to
use the name. There are commercial finance companies, some of which
call themselves factors, single-invoice factors, purchase order
factors, recourse factors, invoice discounters and re-factors.
• Commercial finance companies do not provide credit
guarantees, but lend against collateral, principally receivables
and inventory, and are an offshoot of the factoring industry and
go back to the beginning of the twentieth century. Largely because
the commercial finance companies operate in diverse industries in
contrast with traditional factoring which is still largely married
to textiles and apparel because of the need for credit guarantees
in those industries, it has grown much more rapidly than traditional
factoring. Rather than purchasing receivables, commercial finance
companies take assignments of receivables as collateral for loans.
The client collects the receivables proceeds and uses the funds
to pay down the loan. Defaulted receivables are the client's problem
(but could be the lender's problem if defaults are substantial).
The lender normally provides enough of a cushion so that if the
client fails to repay the loan, the collateral can be liquidated
and provide full payment.
• Single-invoice factors provide essentially the
same services as the old-line factors but they do it one invoice
at a time. Also, there are very few non-borrowing clients for single-invoice
factoring because a company that factors a single invoice usually
is motivated by the need for financing.
•While factors finance receivables after they are
created, purchase-order factors provide financing so clients can
fill orders that they cannot finance on their own. Once the order
is filled and is converted to a receivable, a traditional factor
might purchase the receivable and cash out the purchase order factor.
•Recourse factors are usually small factoring companies
that purchase receivables often in non-traditional industries where
credit information is not readily available. They buy the receivables
but those that are unpaid are charged back to the client.
• Invoice discounting is similar to the recourse
factoring and is prevalent in England and some other European countries.
The invoice discounter buys receivables, but rather than focusing
on the credit worthiness of the client's customer, they concentrate
on whether the contract creating the receivable allows sale or assignment.
Non-paying receivables are charged back to the client.
• Re-factors provide the same services as old-line
factors, but they work with small companies, sometimes with sales
volume as low as $500,000 (generally large factors need at least
$3 million in volume). The re-factors provide the financing, but
use the services of traditional factors to handle the credit checking
and credit guarantees. They make their money from interest on money
advanced and a spread between the re-factors commission cost and
what it charges its own clients.
What's the difference between
asset-based lending and traditional bank financing?
The primary difference between asset-based lending
and commercial bank financing is what the lender looks to first
for repayment of a loan. A bank will look first to the cash flow
for the repayment, then to collateral. An asset-based lender looks
to collateral first. Since banks underwrite cash flow as their primary
repayment source, they typically require less collateral controls
and monitoring but more financial covenants.
For "asset rich" companies, an asset-based loan
may make more funds available because it is not based strictly on
the anticipated levels of cash flow. Additionally, the structure
often requires fewer covenants, providing more flexibility for many
borrowers.
What is typically included
in an asset-based loan agreement?
A typical loan agreement with an asset-based lender provides protections,
rights, and remedies for both parties. It also establishes guidelines
on how the asset-based loan is to be administered and how expectations
are to be met. In addition, the asset-based loan agreement may include
a limited number of restrictive and/or financial covenants, but
these are typically fewer than conventional commercial loan agreements.
How does an asset-based lender
monitor its borrowers?
The level of controls and monitoring by the asset-based
lender is directly related to the credit-worthiness of the borrower.
Typical controls include:
Borrowing base formula
A borrowing base formula that monitors the relationship between
the value of the collateral available to secure the outstanding
loan and the actual balance of the loan on a regular basis.
Collateral reporting
Funding controls, or collateral reporting, may be required daily,
weekly, or monthly and range from submission of sales invoices/shipping
documents to accounts receivable aging and listings/inventory listings.
Collection controls
The asset-based lender requires dominion, or control, over cash
by establishing a collateral account into which accounts receivable
collections are deposited. Access to this account is restricted
to the asset-based lender.
Ongoing audits
Ongoing audits are also used to monitor the account. The asset-based
lender will audit the borrower's books and records periodically
to verify the accuracy and validity and to substantiate collateral
values as represented by the borrower.
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