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Risk and liquidity management are some of the key areas of focus for companies nowadays
> Fulfilling a strategic role that involves greater visibility and responsibility
> Ensuring liquidity and cash for on-going operations, visibility to cash flows / balances, efficient working capital management processes
> Managing Risk holistically, including financial , operations and regulatory risks
> Implementing and optimising technology to enable real time decision-making….
> Complying with new regulations
Source: Serving the new Corporate Treasurer by Oliver Wyman
5 Core Mandates for Company Treasurers after the Global Financial Crisis
The above needed to be done….
> When open account trade continues to grow as a proportion of international trade – now at 70%
> International trade growth is virtually all from open account trade the last 10 years
What is supply chain?
Cash Conversion Cycle
Physical Supply Chain
Financial Supply Chain
Sales Inventory Procurement
InvoicingDistribution Storage Process Transfer Raw materials
Receivables Financing InventoryPayables
•Days Payable Outstanding•Cost of Goods Sold •Early payment supplier discounts•Access to financing
•Return on Invested Capital•Net Debt / EBITDA•EBITDA / Interest•EV / EBITDA
•Inventory Turnover•Access to financing
•Return on Capital employed
•Days Sales Outstanding•Cash flow Efficiency
•Off Balance Sheet Funding•Risk Management
Company’s Considerations
Why Supply Chain?
>Optimising the efficiency of a company’s end to end supply chain, both physical and financial is essential for working capital needs
>Supply chain management has the potential to improve the three key drivers of financial performance – growth, profitability and capital utilisation
Costs
Working Capital Efficiency Reduces Days Sales Outstanding and accelerates the cash conversion cycle through readily accessible liquidity; or more sales with unchanged DSOs
Reduces financing cost by leveraging on the Buyer’s credit strength; secured long-term supply; reduce purchasing cost
Improved liquidity allows suppliers to allocate funds to other use including capital expenditure or investment opportunities
Subject to auditor’s confirmation, potential to minimise impact on the basis of “true sale” of the receivables to ANZ
With the assignment of receivables, there is an opportunity to transfer the buyer’s default/payment risk to the bank
RF provides an alternative source of funding by leveraging off the credit profile of their Buyers, with minimal impact to existing bank relationships (for without recourse structure)
Cash Flow
Risk
Balance Sheet Impact
Access to Credit
Financing supply chain – bank’s approach
>A supply chain event can be issuing of invoice; maturity of payment terms; delivery of goods and etc
>The solution can be provision of financing, guaranteeing payment to you or on your behalf, or both
>The solution can be provided based on your company’s strengths or those of your buyers
A bank’s approach is to ensure that the financial supply chain is designed to match the physical supply chain; financing and/or risk management is triggered by selected events in the chain
FINANCIAL SUPPLY CHAIN
PHYSICAL SUPPLY CHAIN
MANUFACTURERS/ SERVICES
> Process
Your supplier
> Payment>Sales Storage Process
> Payment>Sales
Funds Transfer
Accounts Receivable Financing Inventory
FundsTransfer
Raw materials
Raw materials
Accounts Payable
> Payment>SalesStorage
Your company
Your customer
$
$
Labour I.P. Networks
An example – receivables solutions
Immediate Payment
1. Buyer and seller have a sales contractual relationship
2. Seller to enter a Receivables Purchase Agreement (‘RPA”) with a bank which is comfortable with the buyer’s financial position and the seller’s ability to produce and deliver goods.
3. Seller delivers goods to the buyer and issues invoice (or against PO issued by buyer with invoice to be issued later)
4. ANZ makes payment to the seller (funded structure) or guaranteeing payment upon payment maturity (unfunded structure)
5. On due date of the receivable, the buyer makes payment for the invoiced goods to the bank (for unfunded structures, this payment is forwarded by ANZ to the seller).
How does it work?
Is this Cash?
1. Commercial disputes
2. Money ‘wrongly received’ or ‘deducted’
Delivery of Goods
Deferred Payment
SellerBUYERS
Bank
Case Study 1 – Receivables solution against a large distributor
Supplier : ABC Company – global medical product company selling their products in China
via hospitals and distributors
Buyer: CBA Group – domestic drug distribution conglomerate with 12 major subsidiaries (ABC sells around 25% of their products through CBA Group’s subsidiaries by
value)
Recourse: Without recourse to supplier
Facility Size: over USD30M
Objectives: shorten cash conversion cycle, reduce risk
Special points of interest:
ABC Company sells the corresponding receivables to ANZ China on a without-recourse basis to obtain the funding. Upon receipt of Notice of Assignment sent by ABC Company, at maturity CBA Group will effect payment to ANZ China.
A grace period is added to the financing period to allow flexibility in payments made by CBA Group
Receivables are financed on 100% basis with interest to collect from ABC Company upon maturity.
Upon expiry of grace period, ABC Company has the option of buying back purchased receivables
ABC
CompanyCBA
Group(2) Delivery of goods
(3-a) Apply for Financing & Sign
Agreement
(4) Drawdown for 100%
(5) Payment at maturity (30-60 days)
(1) Sign Contract
(3-d) Notice of Assignment
(3-b) Establish Buyer Limit
(3-a) Apply for Financing & Sign
Agreement
(3-c) Submit documents
Bank
Case Study 2 – Application of receivables solution in IT industry
Supplier: XYZ Technology – global IT equipment supplier outside China
Buyer: DDD Company - key national IT product distributors in China
Facility Size: Over USD50M
Objectives: offload a portion of supplier’s risk against the buyer to stay within its own internal credit limit irrespective of expected sales growth through the buyer.
Special points of interest:
> XYZ’s local company is responsible for delivery of goods to DDD while payments is made by DDD to XYZ’s regional billing centre
> XYZ will not seek to sell receivables to bank unless its internal credit limit against the buyer is exceeded
> Long grace period included in the structure to allow DDD flexibility in making payments to XYZ
> Assignment of receivables (hence risk) will not happen until DDD defaults on payment
>IBM WTC >DCT
>IBM HK
>ANZ
XYZ >DDD
XYZ
Regional
>1. Order
>2. Ship & invoice
3. A/R Assignment and intra company
settlement
5. Payments by remittance to XYZ
Regional
Bank
4. Master Risk Participation
>Agreement
7. If DCT defaults, A/R assignment to ANZ
8. Bank claim on
receivables
against DCT
6. Settlement
Case Study 3 – Receivables solution with traditional trade tool
Supplier: AAA Trading Company – trading company of surface mount technology (SMT)
machines in Asia
Buyer: HH Electronics – leading electronic product manufacturer
Facility Size: over USD40M
Objective: obtain finance leveraging on the buyer’s strengths to settle own import of product under letter of credits
Key points of interest:
> A receivables solution combining a letter of credit operation for AAA’s purchase of end products
- LC is issued to ultimate supplier upon AAA’s signing of contract with HH
- finance (upto its cost of purchase) is provided to AAA to allow its settlement of the LC outstanding
> Quality and reputation of the ultimate supplier is also key to the success of the solution
HH Electro
nics
4. Shipment of goods
(7)
Paym
ent a
t
mat
ur
ity
Supplier
1.
Order
AAA Trading
3. L/C
issued5. Drawdown for 85% invoice
2. Order (L/C)
6. LC
Settlement
bank
Case Study 4 – Receivables solution when there is no sales contracts
Supplier : DD Electronics – reputable manufactuer of computer peripherial devices
Buyer: QQ Computer – one of the largest notebook producers globally
Facility Size: over USD30M
Objectives: provide finance to DD on a without recourse basis based on the long-term supply relationship with QQ
Key points of interest:
> Buyer and seller have worked together for long time hence no sales contract is signed
> inter-connected purchasing and invoicing system hence no physical document flow
DD GroupQQ Compute
r
(2-a) Access system and confirms
acceptance of order via telephone
(2-b) Delivery of goods with supporting
documents
(3) Submit documents
(4) Drawdown for
90%
(5) Payment at maturity
(1) Posts order via online system
How do I get started?
> Look at your company’s balance sheet and profit & loss account
—Do you find your receivables / payables too large and want to trim it down or maintain it while sales grows?
—Do you find your gross profit margin under pressure and want to improve / maintain?
—Do you find your finance cost a bit and want to reduce it?
—Select those largest, most critical payables and receivables as a start by understanding the credit terms and settlement arrangements
> Talk to your purchasing departments
—Review purchase contracts with key suppliers and discuss the purchasing process
—Establish purchasing objectives: better purchase price? secure long-term supply? reduce payment pressure?
—Ask them to talk to the suppliers
> Talk to your sales departments
—Review sales contracts with key buyers and discuss the sales process
—Establish sales objectives: grow sales by better credit terms? Control exposure to key buyers while sales are growing?
—Understand the settlement record of your key buyers and their financial strengths?
—Ask them to talk to their buyers if they are willing to allow your assignment of receivables to bank
Just to re-cap….
>The physical supply chain of your company is also an important source for you to extract values
>Financial supply chain is not just about financing, it is also about balance sheet and risk management
>A supply chain solution is not an off-the-shelf product offered by banks. It is developed highly dependent on your company’s physical supply chain
>A capable bank should pay attention to your company’s physical supply chain in order to develop a solution that suits you
>Developing a supply chain solution requires the involvements of various departments within your company and it takes time; start from your largest or most critical receivables / payables, ie suppliers / buyers and get them prepared to talk to your bank
Benjamin Lam
Head of Trade and Supply Chain China
T. +86 21 6169 6308 E. [email protected]
Yen Poon
Head of Business Development
Trade and Supply Chain China
T. +86 21 6169 6123 E. [email protected]
Contacts
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